282 62 24MB
German, English Pages 468 [467] Year 1907
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©crman Qmcrtcan Qnnals CONTINUATION OF THE QUARTERLY
AMERICANA GERMANICA A BI-MONTHLY DEVOTED TO THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE Historical, Literary, Linguistic, Educational
and Commercial Relations
OF
Germany and America ORGAN OF
The German American Historical Society The National German American Alliance The Union of Old German Students
in America-
EDITOR,
MARION DEXTER LEARNED, University of Pennsylvania.
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS H. C. G. Brandt, Hamilton College.
Harvard University.
W. H. Carpenter,
J.
T. Hatfield,
Columbia University.
Northwestern University.
W. H. Carruth,
T. Hewett, Cornell University. A. R. Hohlfeld, University of Wisconsin. Hugo K. Schilling, University of California.
W.
University of Kansas.
Hermann Collitz, Bryn Mawr College. Starr W. Cutting, University of Chicago.
Daniel K. Dodge, University of
A.
B.
:
Julius Goebel,
H. Schmidt-Wartenberg, University of Chicago.
Illinois.
Hermann Schoenfeld,
Faust,
Columbian University.
Cornell University.
KuNO Francke,
Calvin Thomas, Harvard University. Columbia University. Gerber, Adolph H. S. White, Late of Earlham College. Harvard University. Henry Wood, Johns Hopkins University.
New
Old
Series, Vol. 5.
Series, Vol. 9.
1907.
published by
THE GERMAN AMERICAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY Chas. H. Breitbarth, Business Manager, 809 Spring Garden Street, pbiladelpbfa* JBerlin
mew J^oth
:
MAYER & MOLLER
Xefpsfds
CARL A. STERN
F. A.
BROCKHAUS
lonOon
KEGAN, PAUL TRENCH, TRCBNER &
parts/ CO., Ltd.
H.
LeSOUDIER
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Month. Year. Letter. Vol. Page.
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Ethnographical Survey
53
Month. Year. Letter. Vol. Page.
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$745.00 $ 35-oo 207.25 292.83 91-09 86.46 23.90
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8.47
REVIEWS. By Wm.
G. Bek.
Handbuch des Dcutschfiims im Auslande nebst einem Adressbuch Herausgegeben vom Allgemeinen Deutschen Schulverein zur Erhaltung des Deutschtums im Auslande. Dietrich Reimer. Zweite Auflage. Berlin, 1906. der dentschcn Anslandschnlen.
The work
is
intended for parliamentarians, newspaper
men and
merchants, as well as others interested in German, in foreign lands, and. as the
title
implies, undertakes the
concerning these Germans. closely printed matter, the
enormous task of informing
Although
work
still
it
contains
573 pages of
exhibits a lack of proportion.
we
In the case of the United States, where
judge, the accompanying bibliography omits
are best prepared to
many
of the best and most important sources. The third edition of this work the preparation of which has already begun will, no doubt, supplement this bibliography and enrich the content of the book. The demand for
—
—
such a work
is
attested
2,000 copies of the
first
four months after
its
by the surprisingly rapid disposal of the which supply was exhausted
edition (1904),
publication.
The preface of the second edition is Brandl, who wrote the preface also to the troduction
—which
is
repeated from the
bution of Professor Friedrich Paulsen. the
Germans
in the
United States
is
written by Professor A. first edition,
first
edition
—
is
and the
in-
the contri-
The chapter pertaining to Hermann Ger-
written by Dr.
hard.
The work is divided into two main parts. Part I deals with "Die Deutschen im Auslande." while Part 11 contains the "Adressbuch der deutschen Schnlen im Auslande." Under the caption, "Statistische
Uebersicht, kulturelle und
wirtschaftliche Verhaltnisse,"
123 pages are devoted to the Germans on the American continent, while in the "Adressbuch, etc.," 75 pages are given to America. (54)
Reviews
55
more fully treated than North America. In Part I Germans in the United States covers 12 pages, of the Germans in Brazil covers 45 pages, notwithstand-
South America
is
the account of the
while that
ing the fact that the
German population
can continent, according to the book
of the entire South Ameri-
itself, is
just one-twentieth of
that of the United States alone.
In the chapter on the
Germans
in the
United States the follow-
The History of German Immigration. 2. The Number of Germans. 3. The German Churches. and Periodicals. Societies. German Newspapers 5. 4. German 6. German Theaters. 7. Germany's Commercial Relations. The author of this chapter falls into the mistake, made by ing topics are briefly treated:
i.
some American historians, of calling Francis Daniel Pastorius, the founder of Germantown, a preacher. Pastorius was not a parson but a Doctor of It is
Laws of
the University of Altdorf.
manifest that a compilation of facts such as this book pur-
ports to give
is
valuable.
This particular chapter might be extended
with advantage to the book, as the Germans in America are an important element in the history of
German
With
colonization.
a
more exhaustive use of the reliable and adequate sources at hand, a monumental contribution to the history of Germans in foreign lands must result. The services of Professor Brandl, who was so heartily welcomed in America in 1906, will greatly aid the enterprise. The present edition of the "Handbuch des Deutschtums im Ausland" shows an advance over the first edition toward this result.
Das Deutschtum
Kanada.
in
Von Alwin
Oppel.
{Deutsche Erde.
No. 2 of 1906.)
The
title
is
somewhat broader than the
since it confines itself largely to statistical
article
would
historical facts relative to the date of earliest settlement.
most welcome man on the American continent. the author gives
is
Justify
statements and to a few
But what
to those interested in things
Ger-
pointed out that, while in the United States the Germanic races occupy the most prominent place, in Canada the The accurate record which the Celtic Romanic races predominate. First of
all
it
is
Canadian government keeps of the nationalities within
its
limits,
Reviews
56
makes comparison
Thus Oppel, quoting
easy.
the Canadian census
of 1901, points out that, while there were 3,452,074 persons of CelticRomanic blood, there were only 1,658,330 of German extraction in the Dominion.
The Germans are scattered over the entire inhabited The greatest number of them, however, is cenProvince of Ontario, namely 203,319. Then follow
portion of Canada. tralized in the
Nova Scotia with 41,020, Manitoba with 27,265, Alberta with 7,694, and the other provinces and territories with smaller representations. In the newer settlements in the western part of the Dominion the Germans represent a considerable percentage of the entire populaIn West Assiniboia, for example, 17 per cent, of the population is German. Quite obviously the Germans have sought the tion.
regions of predominantly English inantly
rather than those of predom-
French population.
From
the statistical discussion Oppel turns to the historical.
It
appears that almost precisely a hundred years after the founding of Germantown, Pa., the
first
beginnings of a
German
settlement
were made in Canada. Curiously enough, these first settlers came from the States and largely from Pennsylvania. Here a large number of that religious body known as Mennonites had settled. While their religious tenets forbade them from participating in war or military enterprises of any kind, they were loyal subjects of the crown of England. When the peace of 1783 established the United
many of them, true to their oath of Canada. They settled in Southern Ontario in 1786 and have marked their settlements by giving them German names Berlin, New Hamburg, Breslau, etc. A large number of German Mennonites subsequently went to Canada from Russia, to States as a separate nation, loyalty, departed for
—
escape military duties which the Russian government was about to force upon them. parts of Canada.
centage of the
They sought It will
German
chiefly
the central
be interesting to note
how
and western large a per-
population this religious sect constitutes.
census of 1901, of the 27,265 Germans in Maniwere Mennonites; in the District of Lisgar, of 13,774 Germans, 10,915 were Mennonites; in the District of Provencher, of 5,839 Germans, 4,267 were Mennonites, and in Saskatchawan, of 4,332 Germans, 3,683 belonged to this sect. Oppel concludes his article by saying that the Germans of Can-
According
to tlie
toba, 15,246
:
Reviews ada are not important factors
57
politically for the following reasons
They are scattered over a vast stretch of land. The Mennonites separate themselves from other people. The Germans live, for the most part, in the small towns and
1.
2. 3.
country
districts.
Von Adam Roder.
Reisebilder aus Amerika.
&
1906.
Puttkammer
Mijhlbrecht, Berlin.
This
is
formation.
York."
a book written in a feuilletonistic style upon meager in-
would be more appropriately "Bilder aus
Its title
Like so
many Europeans,
City as equivalent to the
Union and makes
cable to the nation at large.
inhabitants and
competent to four of
Of
New
New York
local observations appli-
this vast country, its millions
multiplex phases of
its
to write,
our
the author regards
life
and
activities,
of
he feels
with considerable conviction, after a brief
visit
New
York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and WashJust what the purpose of the book should be is not an easy
ington.
cities.
matter to divine, unless by means of caricature of our social condiit should serve to deter his fellow countrymen from coming to
tions
From cover to cover it is a great interrogation mark. It of misrepresentations, incongruities and gross statistical and
America. is
full
That a change of the environment of a people and the heterogeneity of our population are unconducive to spontaneous development of the highest stage of culture, the author fails to observe. Every aspect of life he views through the partisan eyehistorical errors.
glass of a self-satisfied European.
He
is
unable to observe in any-
thing, whatsoever, the quickening heart throb of a culture.
What
his
own
new and unique
nation and other European nations, by con-
stant intermingling, by mutual borrowing and reworking have accomplished in centuries of labor, he expects to find, in even a magnified degree, in this new country which has scarcely emerged
from the keenest struggle with primitive conditions. According to Roder all Americans are wholesale plagiarists, ruthless borrowers.
He
denies us every claim to scholarship, going so far even as deny-
ing us the right of a place
among
owning our beloved Mark Twain, assigning him Low Germans. The average German
the English or
American he views with particular abhorrence.
It is
a book of neg-
Reinews
58
German American
Literature.
Amelia von Ende.
Autumn Num-
Poet Lore.
ber, 1906, of
In this article Mrs. von Ende has contributed to a study, a
seri-
which must be eagerly welcomed students who desire a complete and accurate literary history
ous, thorougho-oing treatment of
by
all
of our country.
The author
kind of work.
this
possesses admirable qualifications for
For years she has
closely followed the
German
on both sides of the Atlantic. In a magazine article of only a few pages, however, it is manifestly impossible to enter, exhaustively, into a field so difficult and so many-sided. It literary activities
goes without saying that the excessive brevity has permitted, so to speak, only a bird's-eye view of the entire
there apparent superficiality appears
is
field.
That here and
therefore not surprising.
Many
writers had, necessarily, to be passed with a mere mention. However, some are omitted, who, beyond any doubt, should have a place among German American literary men. Just to mention one H. A. Rattermann, who for years has been a tireless writer and who just now is publishing a monumental edition of his own works. Some of his poems are of such exquisite beauty that they will vie successfully with many European literary works of art. He certainly has won for himself a place among German American men :
of
letters.
However, every thoughtful reader must welcome every serious attempt to interest our countrymen in the gifts which the various elements of our cosmopolitan population have contributed towards
rounding out the inner
Die Glocke.
Carl Schurz.
Number cago,
is
life
5 of the
of our nation.
November.
new monthly Die
devoted almost exclusively to the
Glocke, published at Chi-
memory
of the late Carl
and fitting tribute to the great German American. It touches upon every phase of his eventful life and his manifold activities. The contributors to this memorial number were marshalled from the most active workers German and AngloAmericans in the study of the Germans in America. The Glocke has thus shown itself an important organ of communication between the Germans of America and their kinsmen in the old Fatherland. Schurz.
It
is
—
a beautiful
—
Reviews Longfellow and German Romance. Number of Poet Lore, 1906.
59
Fred Lewis Pattee.
Spring
Professor Pattee gives us an excellent bit of comparative study.
He
has contributed an important piece of
work towards the serious, modern method of studying Longfellow and the literary forces influencing his thought. statements well.
Pattee proceeds cautiously and clinches his
The
parallel situations
which he
cites in the life
of Longfellow and that of the founder of the
German Romantic He shows how the
School of Literature, Novalis, are striking.
American poet's own temperament, his Puritanic tendencies, the overwrought condition of his mind after the death of his wife and of his friend, his European surroundings and the literature which he read, slowly but surely turned him to Romanticism and made such poems as Hyperion and the collection Voices of the Night possible.
The Psalm of Life was an attempt to break away from the moodiness and aimlessness into which Romanticism had led him. It was stimulated by Goethe's Wilhelm Meister. Professor Pattee says that in this felt for the first
Some
poem
the spirit of Goethe's great novel
made
itself
time in America.
of the marks of the Romantic poets are their revelries in
things* pertaining to the olic
Middle Ages, their adoration for the CathChurch, their worship of Dante. All these Longfellow shared
And
with the Romanticists. great mass of his poetry
is
he does
really
it
to such an extent that the
American only
in
theme, a statement
which might be strongly contested.
The
article is well written.
comparisons and
It
contains no far-fetched or forced
and straightforwardness appeal to the students as something of real worth in the modern comparative its
logic
Von Karl Lamprecht. Freiburg im Breisgau.
Americana.
A German rial
He
1906.
Hermann
Heyfelder,
small book written with intended fairness by an eminent scholar.
It is
much
too small to contain the mass of mate-
which the author has acquired during expressly disclaims
all
his
American
travels.
attempts at completeness and simply gives
Reviews
6o
some few of
to his readers
his
many
That he was
observations.
demonstrably impelled by a desire to inquire
scientifically into
and conditions no one will doubt. 56 pages of the book are devoted
Amer-
ican Institutions
The
first
to
an interesting
diary which contains, so to speak, the snapshot impressions of a
very extended tour through this country.
Part two contains more
deliberate reflections based on actual observations, namely, concern-
ing American piety, the influence of physical conditions on the
judgment of the Americans, an interview spirit of the Americans, American and Teutonism, and finally the American univer-
people, the quantitative
with Carl Schurz, the martial liberty,
politics
sities.
The author
is
convinced
He
dem-
that, despite the great variety of
onstrations, the Teutonic element of the United States
is,
after
all,
farm lies the hope and strength of our nation. He criticises, and doubtless justly, our quantitative judgment. He attributes this trait to the newness of
deeply religious.
believes that in the
the country and finds parallels for
To
Carl Schurz
—the
inclination.
German American
Their numerous monuments
est artistic value
—are
much
to
—he
—not
always of the high-
nevertheless pertinent demonstrations of the
esteem in which their heroes are held. butes not so
in every colonial civilization.
pays a most finds the American people to be of martial
greatest
He
beautiful tribute.
it
This martial sense he
attri-
an overwrought national pride as to the con-
sciousness of physical ability, a feeling acquired in the daily con-
quest of primitive conditions.
he concludes that dustry."
Under
it
is
Concerning our much-boasted
liberty
largely "the liberty of the captains of in-
the heading
Teutonism he touches upon the
oft-
expressed wish that the Teutonic nations should stand shoulder to shoulder for the development of the highest culture and for the
Although the author has seen a great many universities, he does not feel competent to formulate a complete picture of what the American university really is and how He has seen many it differs in detail from the European university. interesting things, some of which he even recommends to European
greatest mutual good.
American
universities.
In the last part of his book, by far the most serious, Professor
Lamprecht gives a resume of
his
American impressions.
He
treats
Reviews briefly
He
our history.
notes the want of true and typical Ameri-
can culture, but he recognizes,
Then he New England has made such culture.
New England
6i
in
innumerable signs, the dawn of which
discusses, in brief, the contributions to the
United States and gives reasons why
should have a development differing from that of the
Next he
American literature and joins Edgar Allan Poe the distinction of being the most typical American writer. He observes the wellknown fact that we have no drama and attributes it, in part, to other states.
deals with
other critics in ascribing to
He
Puritanic influence.
is
undecided whether to
call the
short story
American or whether we owe indebtedness to Maupassant and Kipling. The display of American art at the Louisiana Pur-
typically
chase Exposition has convinced the author that the standard of
American
art
It is to
ascending.
is
be regretted that Professor Lamprecht has seen
confine himself to such brevity of description.
We
fit
to
should welcome
the historian's opinion in greater detail.
Amertkanische Eindrilcke.
und
Berlin.
J.
Von Ludwig
Doubtlessly this book will find since
it
contains
foreigner,
and
its
Fulda.
1906.
Stuttgart
G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger.
many
many eager
readers in America,
interesting observations by a well-wishing
criticisms are fair
and valuable.
At the outset
Dr. Fulda emphasizes the fact that he does not purpose to write a
book on America. His superior judgment convinces him of the folly of such an attempt after an acquaintance of only a few months' sojourn. Therefore he proposes to give only the rather general impressions which he gained on his American tour. He does this impartially and in a particularly pleasing manner. It must be remembered ^and Fulda says so, in substance, himself that he saw
—
America, as
—
it
were, in
full dress.
As
the guest of the Germanistic
Society of America, to which body, by the way, his book
was
is
dedi-
and so constantly occupied, that a quiet study of existing conditions was wholly out of the question. It is doubtful whether this fact is to be regretted, as so few Europeans see America just as Fulda saw it. It cannot have anything but a wholesome effect to emphasize this side for once. Of cated, he
so hospitably entertained
62
Reviews
cities he has seen a good deal. He recognizes the utility of American skyscrapers and even succeeds in seeing some beauty in
our
He
these colossal structures. tion of
many Americans
the fact that so
He
compliments the parks, the illumina-
the gigantic undertakings to facilitate traffic,
tlie cities,
live in
and
houses which they own.
paving of our streets and the horribly unsightly
criticises the
telegraph and telephone poles seen in
many
places.
He
recognizes
and does justice to the manifest attempt to beautify our towns and His conclusion is that American cities even Boston and cities. Washington are yet unfinished. He compares the cities to young giants who have outgrown their immaturity. Their old garments have become too small and somehow they do not know how to de-
—
—
port themselves in the
new
ones.
Speaking of American travel, he lavishly compliments the comfort and luxury which state-room passengers enjoy. The accommodations accorded to those inferior
and
to the conclusion:
less
wealthy he
finds,
than those of Germany.
less practical
on the whole, This leads him
"The American is practical only in great things." Germans of America are well worth
Fulda's observations on the
the careful perusal of anyone interested in this class of our citizens.
He
recognizes the fact that the bone and sinew of the "Deutsch-
tum"
in this country are the
the intellectual aristocrats into
The author duly
our midst.
goes on
German farmers and
whom
daily, yes hourly, to
the families of
the Revolution of 1848 brought respects the titanic struggle which
keep things German, particularly the
language, alive in this English-speaking land, but he duly points
out the ultimate .effect ity.
futility
of this struggle, and shows the baneful
of attempting the control of two languages with equal dexter-
(I should like to interpolate this
my
thought here, germane to
opinion this very duality of language
this
one of the causes why German Americans do not use the pen with more subject, that in
facility
is
than they do, in either language.)
The mixture of dialects and languages among the Pennsylvanians, some specimens of which he saw also in print, did not impress Fulda very favorably.
The playwright compliments
warmest terms the great GerChicago and Milwaukee; the many excellent German clubs, and especially the
man newspapers
of
New
York,
in
St. Louis, Cincinnati,
Reviews
German
distinctly
when one a German
As
German
experiences just a
Philadelphia on the
Doubtlessly this
theatre.
time the dramatist excellent
One
theatres.
fails to see
63
made
is
list
due
little
surprise
of cities boasting of
to the fact that at the
his visit to Philadelphia, the surpassingly
theatre of this city
was not yet completed.
a loyal son of the Fatherland Fulda was, of course, inter-
know in how far the German Americans were pleased with new surroundings. His observation was that they are satisfied with their new conditions, and his question, as to whether they
ested to their
would
like to return to the
Fatherland, was answered, almost uni-
home have changed so materially. Still he seems to detect in the depths of their hearts a consuming homesickness "Heimweh haben sie alle." formly, in the negative, largely because conditions at
—
Whether
this last assertion
could be
made with
so
much
after an intimate acquaintance with the great farming,
ing and laboring classes, who, after
all,
of the German American population,
is
positiveness
manufactur-
constitute a large percentage
not at
all
so certain.
Concerning American education and methods of instruction Fulda waxes quite enthusiastic. He says "If I should say what surprised me most in America and by far surpassed my expectation, :
I
should answer
:
It
was not the skyscraper, the
territorial extent of
the country, not the gigantic proportions of the life;
He
the education and the system of instruction." college sports a
wholesome
substitute for the
ing of American students he says keine versofifenen Gesichter."
:
"Man
it
was rather
recognizes in our
German
duel.
Speak-
sieht keine zerhackten
und
The Manual Training Schools were
a revelation and agreeable surprise to him. In co-education he sees none of those dangers which the opponents of the system argue,
but rather a perfectly natural condition, entirely wholesome to both sexes.
He
recognizes in
of the American
knows
it
one of the causes of the independence
woman and
her ability to shift for herself.
herself to be intellectually the equal of
ciation of the
two sexes
in the schools
Fulda
man.
To
She
this asso-
attributes, in a large
American youth. Under the heading, "Culture of the Masses and Art," he compliments the systems of University Extension and the Chautauqua, which bring culture to those who cannot attend college. Of our libraries he speaks in warmest terms, and contrasts the ease of finddegree, the comparative moral purity of the
64 ing;
Reviezvs
books and the
of them, with the anti-
liberality in the free use
quated library methods prevalent
in his
own
country.
The
excessive
haste with which American newspapers gather and disseminate
news means of educating the masses, and the persistent and omnipresent reporter and interviewer are abominations in his eyes. He recognizes our want of true art and finds its cause in the newness of our country and the unsettled seems to him
to be of questionable value as a
condition of our people.
great works of
We
He
asserts that
no colony ever produced
which nature and our own history so abundantly offer. Willing hands have lavishly supplied museums and galleries with money, but the true artist is not produced by money. As playwright he especially notes the absence of a truly American drama. He is justly astonished at the ways in which laws are evaded in America.
As
art.
to utilize the material
general characteristics he credits us with singular patience
(a conclusion which tiate),
still fail
more intimate acquaintance might not substan-
optimism, hospitality, honesty in
little
things, rascality in the
large ones, and a decided tendency towards chauvinism.
All in
all,
he has obtained a very fair view of America, of our
strong points and our weaknesses.
mous
He
is
convinced of the enor-
and the still latent energy in this country. In "If the Old World is not to be overshadowed conclusion he says by the New, if she is not eventually to be crushed by her superior force even without hostile contact, she has only one single expedient. The hope, however, that it will be opportunely applied seems to be more Utopian now tlian ever. It is called The United States of Europe." Wm. G. Bek, potential wealth :
:
©crman Qmcrican Qnnals CONTINUATION OF THE QUARTERLY
AMERICANA GERMANICA A BI-MONTHLY DEVOTED TO THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE Historical, Literary, Linguistic, Educational
and Commercial Relations
OF
Germany and America ORGAN OF
The German American Historical Society The National German American Alliance The Union of Old German
Studettts in Atnerica
EDITOR,
MARION DEXTER LEARNED, University of Pennsylvania.
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS H. C. G. Brandt, Hamilton College. W. H. Carpenter, Columbia University. W. H. Carruth,
Harvard University. J.
Northwestern University. T. Hewett, Cornell University, A. R. Hohlfeld, University of Wisconsin. Hugo K. Schilling, University of California.
University of Kansas.
University of Chicago.
H. Schmidt-Wartenberg,
Daniel K. Dodge, A.
B.
T. Hatfield,
W.
Hermann Collitz, Bryn Mawr College. Starr W. Cutting, University of
:
Julius Goebel,
University of Chicago.
Illinois.
Hermann Schoenfeld,
Faust,
Columbian University. Calvin Thomas, Columbia University. Harvard University. H. S. White, Adolph Gerber, Harvard University. Late of Earlham College. Henry Wood, Johns Hopkins University. Cornell University.
KuNO Francke, '
New
Old
Series, Vol. 5.
Series, Vol. 9.
1907.
published BY
THE GERMAN AMERICAN HISTORICAL SOCIETY Chas. H. Breitbarth, Business Manager, 809 Spring Garden Street, IPbiladelpbfa.
JBetUn:
MAYER & Mt)LLER
Ulcwlotl;:
CARL A. STERN
Xefpsiflt F. A.
BROCKHAUS Paris !^
Xon&on:
KEGAN, PAUL TRENCH. TRUBNER &
CO.. Ltd.
H.
LeSOUDIER
(Scrman Qmcrican Clnnals CONTINUATION OF THE QUARTERLY
AMERICANA GERMANICA New
March and April
Series,
Vol. V.
No.
Old Vol.
1907.
2.
Series,
IX.
No.
2.
DIALECTAL PECULIARITIES IN THE CARLISLE VERNACULAR. The town is
of Carlisle, the county seat of Cumberland County,
situated eighteen miles southwest of Harrisburg, in the midst
of the fertile and beautiful Cumberland Valley.
Cumberland County was formed from a part of Lancaster In 1757, the town of Carlisle was surveyed and on July 23, of the same year, by order of the Governor of Pennsylvania the first court of Common Pleas was held there. With this date the history of Carlisle as a town may be said to commence. County, in 1750.
The
inhabitants of the town, exclusive of the
two thousand
negroes, are largely descended from the Scotch-Irish and from
the Germans,
gan
The former were
the
first settlers.
to settle in the valley about 1760,
not begin
till
ten years later.
By
The
latter be-
though the great influx did
the year 1775, however, the
Germans had become so numerous that two tions had been organized in the town.
religious
denomina-
In the early history of Carlisle, the services in the Lutheran
church were conducted
in
German, which was however, gradually (67)
68
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Ver^iacular.
replaced by English to meet the desires and needs of the younger
In 1858, those Lutherans
generation.
service exclusively in
German
who
desired to have the
established a separate church. This
flourished for a time but as the
younger generations came on
and demanded that the services be conducted This led to a compromise, one service on Sunday
they desired
in
English.
in
German and one in English. In 1896, the charter of this church was changed so that all of the services might be conducted in English. Soon afterwards the little German church was abandoned, a new chapel was built to which is now being added one of the handsomest church buildings in the country. The change in the charter of this church in 1896 marks the final
Americanization of the German element of
Carlisle.
The
change had, of course, been gradual but it had been thorough. This took place only eleven years ago but so thoroughly have
Germans been amalgamated that a stranger coming to the town to-day finds scarcely any traces of their existence. No Gerthe
man
is
spoken on the
scarcely ever hears
should ask a
streets,
own
is
perchance, you
Scotch-Irish and properly impressed
to
I
linguistic training I
make
note of expressions which differed from
speech and have continued to do so ever since. sult of these observations, this
If,
he knows Pennsylvania Dutch, he will
became a resident of Carlisle and having was soon struck by certain peculiarthe vernacular, which impressed me as being dialectal. I
had some ities in
market house one
impertinence you will pass on your way.
In the year 1899
began
in the
any Pennsylvania Dutch.
Carli'sler if
reply with dignity that he
with your
and even
It is
my own
with the re-
covering a period of seven years, that
paper has to deal.
Before proceeding to a discussion of the particular expres-
words in reference to the method pursued in them may be in order. In no case have I hunted after strange words or forms of speech but in every case have noted only such expressions as oc-
sions involved a few collecting
:
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
69
curred in the speech of the person with
whom
Had
could have increased the
list
I really
searched for rare birds,
largely but
I
was conversing.
would not have been representative of
it
All of the expressions noted
ple.
I
I
all
the peo-
have heard used again and
again by merchants, by college students, and by the best people It is not necessary to say that there are many peowho speak an English, which is practically dialect free. The population of the town being such as I have described it, we should naturally expect the language to reflect in some degree the racial peculiarities of the people. The Carlisle Vernacu-
of the town. ple
lar
should retain traces of Scotch (English) and of German.
The major lary, for
portion of this study will be devoted to vocabu-
reasons which will appear
later.
For convenience the various words and expressions are
ar-
ranged alphabetically
Against look
:
( i )
new
Preposition
—
against yours.
arose from the
in contrast to,
e.
g.
These shoes
This use of the word evidently
German "gegen"
in this sense,
which was
translated into English.
(2) Conjunction
— By the time,
pastoral calls finished,
This
All
:
is
is
I
against
e. g.
I
get
my
have no time for social ones.
colloquial English.
used as in
German to denote e. g. The butter
exhausted,
be increased ad libitum.
We
that the supply of an article is
The examples might
all.
have here, of course, a simple
translation and adoption of the
German
expression.
Already (commonly contracted to a'ready) In actual meaning this word does not differ from the regular English usage. It is used in Carlisle, however, much more frequently than in communities where there is no German influence, and to :
one familiar with
this
language
enced by Ger. schon.
Have you
studied algebra?
it is
evident that
it is
influ-
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernaczdar.
70
had
I
it
Do you know I
have seen
How many I
Beal
my Freshman
already in
year.
the old Stone Tavern it
?
already.
pair of shoes can
you
beel)
(pr.
to
:
fester,
suppurate,
day?
sole in a
have half-soled three pair already in
my
"He
time.
has a healed ear
or finger."
word, which the dictionaries mark obsolete except
This
in Scotland,
is still
"A
Bealing:
generally used.
This
boil."
substantive
from the verb "to
dialect.
noun beal. word-making taking place in the The new noun healing has been made from the verb
to heal,
whereas, historically, the reverse
beal" has taken the place of the old
We
have here a
heal beine o derived
Dare
:
To
Dare
I
bit of
from the noun
true; the verb
heal.
denote permission instead of may,
go
is
e. g.
you dare go.
out.
Students regularly translate darf ich zvagen by "dare
I
venture."
The
universal use of dare in this sense I believe
is
due to
the influence of Ger. .dilrfen.
Deaf:
(pr. deef)
The word
:
is
sterile, blasted.
restricted, I believe, to the kernels of nuts, as
a deaf walnut.
Flit
:
to
move from one
Flitting: (i) Household
A
place to another.
removal from one place to another. (2) removal from one place
effects in the course of
to another.
In these words, which are north Eng. or Scotch,
we
see
the influence of the Scotch-Irish portion of the population.
Get
:
in the
e. g. "we are getting bokonmen Besuch." "wir
expression "to get company,"
company to-morrow"
ef.
Ger.
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
Leave
— Eng.
"let"
common
of
is
usual in the vulgar speech of further
Let
comment
— Eng.
:
usage
communities,
"leave,"
(
:
Although
obsocommon.) seems no doubt that Ger. "lassen" has
— Eng. "for" with
)
I
minutes on the
fifteen
Although there
meaning which is
to expect, look for
Even
if
in this locality.
Wait on me.
e. g.
is
it
waited
I
car.
meaning
inclined to believe that
"auf."
wait,
it
an obsolete Eng. exprescsion
is
similar in
(This
the book in the room.
I let
g.
e.
been the chief factor in preserving
On
is
needs no
it
here.
English, there
lete
occurrence, but since this all
frequent, but not
is
71
(cf.
we assume
am
to this usage, I
we have that
to
wait on
Cent. Diet, wait, 4, d), nevertheless
here a translation of Ger.
it is
a survival of the obsolete
Eng. expression, there seems to be no doubt that its perEng. "in" in sistence is due to German influence. (2) the phrase "on the attic," which is universally used. This is
—
dem Boden."
plainly a translation of Ger. "auf
Once: used
as an expletive
—
Ger. einmal,
e.
g.
come here
once.
This word
of
is
common
eign to English usage,
occurrence, and since
we must
Is
it
likewise attribute
it
for-
to the
German.
Outen: Pair
:
to put out,
— "a few." Although
am Red up Slippy
cf.
I
"Shall
German
Should:
it is
quite
common among e.
g. I
this usage, I
the uneducated.
must red up the room.
slippery.
in the
German
sense of report, to be said,
should have said that that
onten the light." [Prov. Eng.]
"ein paar."
to put to rights, clean,
—
I
have heard only one instance of
informed that :
:
e. g.
i.
e.
he
is
er sollte gesagt haben, dass
e.
g.
He
said to have said
:
:
:
:
!
:
Vernacular.
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Cat lisle
72
Still:
The Century Dictionary under meaning
gives the
ways, ever, as
in
use.
''still"
(2)
habitually,
al-
The following examples
are
constantly,
common
the adverb
continually,
cited
Thou
still
hast been the father of
good news.
Shak. Hamlet, 11,
What
2, 42.
a set face the gentlewoman has, as she were
going to a
sacrifice
B. Johnson, Cynthia's Revels
O
still
iv,
i.
of friends! (Pelides thus replied),
first
Still at
my
heart,
and ever
at
my
side.
Pope, Iliad Despite the definition and examples,
I
XL
743.
think the following
specimens of the Carlisle dialect will strike the ordinary
American as strange and unfamiliar, though they are
evi-
dently survivals of this usage.
Can you take away my ashes ? If you save them I will get them
A
(a negro).
still
barber, in speaking of a certain hair tonic, which he
considered the best, said
That's what
I tell
them
That
still.
is, I
always
tell
people
that when they ask about hair tonics.
A market woman,
when asked whether
certain apples
were
pippins, replied
We still call A carpenter,
them in
little
yellow apples.
speaking about bidding good-bye to his
parrot, said I tell
A
him
still
storekeeper,
when in
I
go
telling
to work.
how many
kerosene cans to his store to be
What
filled,
a string of kerosene cans
students
brought
remarked
we would have
to
fill
sHll. I
often hear Jersey people use idioms which seem funny
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
me
to
This student,
still.
he did not use this zvord
You
who
is
of
German
he became
till
could hear him swearing
73
extraction, says
a resident of CarHsle.
still
whenever you went
near his house.
He
A
still
girl
me
writes
was
about the good fishing out there.
calling to another,
who
replied:
Don't
yell
you still. If we examine these expressions we find the meaning of still to be that given by the Century Dictionary, but it would be difficult to persuade one that they are specimens of normal so much, I heard
English.
They
are evidently survivals of this old use of
Scotch-Irish influence.*
"still" due, doubtless, to
Strange: This
shy, diffident, bashful,
"your children are strange."
an extension of the older Eng. usage
is
(cf.
Cent.
Diet, strange, 6).
Till
instead of by in expressions of time.
:
I
must get
I will
my
make
it
In this use of
shoes
up
till
till
Hll,
Sunday.
next lesson.
which
is
extremely common,
German
simply a translation of the
we have
"bis" in similar expres-
sions.
That:
The demonstrative
(i)
that
subject of the verb "to be,"
employ
That
:
g. that's
e.
I
this or
is
where
frequently used as the
it.
a cold day to-day.
have been unable to account for
At
"das
heute kalt," but this use of das
ist
first
this
sylvania German, which
say probably, because
is
I
is
German
not found in Penn-
have not investigated the history
should be glad to learn whether Irish communities. I
satisfac-
probably the German of Carlisle.
*I attribute this survival to Scotch-Irish' influence
other cause.
usage
sight, one naturally thinks of the
torily.
I
normal English we
in
it
is
because I know of no used in other Scotch-
:
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
74
Germans
of the
am
here, nor
I
information on the subject.
any precise should develop on in-
able to discover
If
it
vestigation that any considerable portion of the population
spoke a
we might
then
which "das
in
dialect,
ist
heute kalt" was used,
reasonably class this
among
the
German-
on the other hand, as is doubtless the case, the German of Carlisle was Pennsylvania German, then we must
isms.
If,
explain this usage as English, but what sort of English
When we
dog we say "That's a
pet a
something goes wrong we say "That's a nice or "That's a fine state of affairs."
?
when
nice dog," or
kettle of fish"
under
Is the use of that
discussion a possible extension of the usage illustrated in these expressions? If
we must Toot
explain
it
— a paper bag.
it
of English origin,
is
in this
it
seems that
way.
This comes evidently through Pa. Ger.
Tilte.
—
Towards look
in contrast to, in
new
to English, I take
of Ger. "gcgen/'
—
Watch up
watch
will
comparision with, Since this usage
tozvards mine. it
cf.
that
we have
against
I
am
Your
shoes
here another translation
keep an eye upon,
up," said a physician
certain ailment.
g.
altogether alien
— gcgen.
to observe carefully, it
e.
is
when
e.
g.
"I
consulted about a
unable to acount for this use of "up,"
comes from such expressions as "hold up," meaning wait, and "wait up," where up seems merely to intensify
unless
Yet
it
the
meaning of the
—
I.
verb.
In addition to what has preceded, too.
One warm day
was comfortably ensconced on a couch enjoying a ^
prandial cigar; a friend sitting near
(i)
A
to be
kill
I
have a
rifle
a mati yet.
post-
inquired:
fanned yetl
doctor, in describing his
(2)
and
Do you want
me
I
rifle,
said to
me
which can shoot through two
trees
:
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
My my
75
neighbor's yard slopes so that the water runs into
In describing this to a carpenter, he said And they have a posey bed yet against the wall,
cellar.
(3) in addition to a yard sloping the
e.
i.
wrong way, they have
a
flower bed against the wall.
"Yet," meaning in addition
with comparatives.
to, is
In meaning
found is
it
in English, usually
closely akin with its
use here, but I believe that everyone unfamiliar with the diaare lect under discussion will admit that these expressions In view of
unusual.
suggestion of "noch"
what has already been
said, the
mere
believe, suggest the proper ex-
will, I
planation of this use of yet to one familiar with the
German
language. II.
—
still
— Ger.
When we III.
"noch."
lived in the country
-yet.
In certain cases "yet" seems to be used merely as an inFor example, I once asked a student how often he tensive.
which he
replied,
"Every day
had Latin,
to
yet" , that
"I have Latin every single day".
is
in
the
week
On another occasion I said to a coachman "you are making money these days," He replied "Yes, but I have to work tard, I
have been up
yet."
As
till
two o'clock three nights
cf.
week
far as I can see, "yet" merely emphasizes the
statement, "I have been up
week."
this
till
Ich ware noch diese
two o'clock three nights
Woche
this
in die Stadt gezogen,
ware das Wetter nicht so schon gewesen. IV.
German "doch." A boy was showing me
room which a friend had decorated with playing cards he said "The boy that decorated this room seemed to know a good poker hand, and he's a ;
a
:
preacher yet!^
V.
— Ger.
"noch."'
Must
these envelopes be sent out this week, yef^.
Dialectal Peadiarities in the Carlisle Vernacidar.
7t)
From
the examples given
it
perfectly evident that
is
we
have here various translations and adoptions of Ger. "doch" and "noch." This completes the us
now
of peculiarities in vocabulary;
list
let
turn our attention to the subject of Syntax, which can,
unfortunately, be disposed of in a few words, as
have noticed
I
but three peculiarities, which are so general as to cause comment.
There may be
others, but in conversation they pass without at-
The
tracting attention.
first
example
the frequent use of the
is
present tense instead of the perfect to denote an action begun in
and continued
the past since I
am
As
here.
in the present
far as I
"I have had only one
e. g.
have observed,
this use of the present
occurs only in clauses introduced by since, though occurs likewise in independent clauses.
This
it
doubtless
of course, the
is,
well-known German use of the present tense instead of the English perfect.
The second
syntactic peculiarity
is
as auxiliary without a dependent infinitive, in,
up,
outy,
down,
Although
week."
etc." I
want
"I only
:
have been on the
other auxiliaries, none has
come
to
"want" "Do you want
the use of the verb e.
g.
at that
stuff
alert for this
once a
usage with
my notice.
We
have here, due to Scotch-Irish, a survival of what was once common in English. The reason for its survival with
"want" seems
to
a child says "I
much to
as he
is
lie
in the transitive
want
out," he
is
meaning of
this verb.
of the place or state designated by out,
he out, rather than to go out.
presses a state or condition
When
not thinking of the verb go, so
The
which
i.
e. I
want
phrase to be out really exis
the object of the verb
want.
The
third syntactic peculiarity
the old ethical dative,
A
e. g.
father, bringing his
afraid he
will get
that this
was an
is
the cjuite
common
use of
My
dog died for me. young son to college,
homesick for mc." ethical dative.
The
said
:
"I
am
conversation showed
The man meant
that the boy
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
would get homesick not for himself body and everything at home. Let us
now
in particular,
but for every-
turn to a consideration of accent and
pronunciation of the word balcony, which accent has struck
me
as peculiar.
It is
is
77
the only
very frequently, though
not universally, accented on the second syllable, which course, the older English pronunciation.
Its retention is
is,
of
doubt-
due to Scotch-Irish influence.
less
The most
striking peculiarity of the Carlisle dialect, the one
which instantly it,
the
first to
word whose
attracts the attention of a person unfamiliar with
the sentence stress in interrogative sentences.
is
I
am
pre-
this for two reasons first, because it an extremely difficult matter to explain on paper; secondly, because I have never been able to offer any satisfactory explana-
pared here only to mention
:
is
tion of
it.
between
In passing,
may
I
real questions,
simply say that there
is
a difference
asking for information and between ques-
tions expressing surprise.
For example,
in the question
"Are
you going down town?" the voice is not kept up on town, but we have a circumflex accent on the word, the voice being lower at end of the word than in any other part of the sentence. In a question of surprise,
have what
may
as,
The man
died last night. Did he?
be called a circumflex sentence
we
stress, the pitch
being highest in the middle of the sentence and lowest at the end.
some future time to secure phonographic reprowhen I shall be able to examine it more carefully, and I may then be able to offer some explanation of it. If now we examine the material presented, and if we admit as we must, that the various expressions depart sufficiently from normal English to warrant our calling them dialectal, it will be an easy matter to characterize these variations and to attribute them to their proper causes. The Carlisle vernacular reflects I
hope
at
ductions of this accent,
very cFearly the dual character of the population.
We
have
found a few survivals of obsolete or obsolescent English due to the influence of the Scotch-Irish, but
that the persistence of
some
of these
it
was
must be remembered traceable to the influ-
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
78
German words. The vast majority of all the deviations from the English norm are directly traceable to the influence of the Germans, who since the latter part of the eighteenth ence of similar
century, formed a considerable part of the population. believe, has
been
other proof
is
all
sufficiently
needed,
it is
This,
I
proved in the foregoing pages, but
if
only necessary to remark that nearly
of the peculiarities of the Carlisle vernacular are also found
in the speech of other localities
where there
is
a considerable
Pennsylvania German population.
That the Gemians have left the imprint of their language upon the speech of the town is not surprising. It would be strange, indeed, if one race living for more than a century side by side with another had not left behind it some clear traces of its existence. The surprising thing is not that there are some relics of
German
in Carlisle English,
but that there are not more.
must remember, however, what was said lisle
to-day
completely Americanized
is
been amalgamated and
all
in the beginning.
the
;
German element has
the cultural forces in the
community
are tending to destroy rather than preserve traces of influence.
The
older
Germans
passing away; the children
either
in
We Car-
German
have passed or are rapidly
the schools read only English,
and when they come in contact with teachers who come from a distance or who, through training, have their attention called to their peculiarities.
As
grow
they
up,
many
of the boys leave
town and, once away from Carlisle, they notice differs
from
that of those with
whom
lect-free, are the
ization at
work
which it is,
is
Quite a
the college (Dickinson)
their attention continually called to
ever diatectal expressions they Finally, the large
their speech
they associate.
number of young men and women enter and while there have
how
may
what-
use.
number of people who are
most powerful element
practically dia-
in the process of
constantly in progress.
With
of course, only a question of time
all till
nonnal-
these forces these expres-
sions disappear from use.
In view of these facts
it
seemed desirable to record the vari-
Dialectal Peculiarities in the Carlisle Vernacular.
79
ous expressions to which attention has been called, while they are still an integral part of the town's vocabulary. In so doing I hope to have contributed slightly to our knowledge of the German influence is,
upon the language of Pennsylvania, an influence which who know, but which can only
of course, recognized by those
be definitely determined by investigations similar to the one
made
here.
William Prettyman. Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
PATRIOTISCHE BETRACHTUNGEN.* Wer im
Laiife der letzteii Jahre die deiitsche
derholentlich besucht hat,
dem
Heimat wie-
gewiss aufge fallen, wie sehr
ist
fiir unser Land von Jahr zn Jahr gestiegen Die Amerikafahrt des Prinzen Heinrich von Preussen, die
driiben das Interesse ist.
Louiser Weltausstellung von
grossartige Beschickung der St. seiten des
Deutschen Reiches
Literatur liber sten Beweise
Amerika und
fiir
iind das stetige
die
Amerikaner
Anschwellen der
liefern die deutlich-
dieses Interesse.
Aber man macht
sich
trotzdem in Deutschland eigentlich
und die Flut der Biicher, Amerika hat sich bis jetzt noch
kein klares Bild von unseren Zustanden,
Broschuren und
Feuilletons iiber
nicht fahig erwiesen, die in Deutschland landlaufigen phantasti-
schen Vorstellungen iiber Amerika zu berichtigen. ser
kennen
in
manchen
Fallen das
tiger Durchfahrt, oder sie
Hoboken mit das redliche
kamen gar
Bemuhen
iiber die
Bei anderen Touristen ersichtlich,
in
das
fliich-
Umgegend von
und alkoholischen
ihren landschaftlichen
uberhaupt nicht hinaus.
Die Verfas-
Land nur obenhin aus
ist
Reizen
wenigstens
Wesen der fremden
Kultur einzudringen, und das vorhandene Verstandnis fur manche Aber ihrer greifbarsten Erscheinungen verdient Anerkennung.
wenn man etwa wahrnimmt, wie sich selbst unter den liebevoU zeichnenden Handen eines Wilhelm von Polenz das Bild Amerikas bis zur Unkenntlichkeit verzerrt, so lernt man begreifen, dass sich vermittels blosser Reiseeindriicke das wahre Wesen Jedoch selbst eines Volkes nie und nimmermehr erfassen lasst. den Urteilen langjahriger Kenner
ist
nicht
ohne weiteres zu
*Der lette Teil dieses Aufsatzes ist einer von dem Verfasser auf dem Germanistischen Kongress gehaltenen Rede (Siehe G. A. A., N. S. II., No. 12)
entnommen. (80)
8i
Patriotische Betrachtungen
trauen.
In
cler
Tat vermochte bisher kein einziger
iinter
ihnen
Amerikas Leben in seiner g-anzen Vielwendigkeit organisch zu Kein Mensch ist eben imstande, den Historiker und erklaren. Politiker, National-Oekonomen und Juristen, Soziologen und Techniker, Kaufmann und Lehrer in einer Person zu vereinen. Und das ware im Grunde die Voraussetzung fiir die durchaus zufriedenstellende Behandlung eines so komplizierten Themas. Unter den Vorarbeiten auf dem weiten Felde der Amerika-
kunde gebiihrt Prof. Miinsterbergs zweibiindigem Werk
Amerikaner" der
erste Platz.
Ja, hiltte
,,Die
Miinsterberg nicht durch
Stimmung fiir uns zu machen, Abwege fiihren lassen; litte nicht
seine Absicht, driiben gute
sein
Urteil gelegentlich auf
sein
griindliches
und
in
dem
iibermassigen
sich
nicht
seine
den meisten Stiicken gediegenes Buch unter
Schematismus des Grundbaus
und bezoge
;
Darstellung mehr auf eine besondere Gesell-
schaftsschicht als auf die Gesamtheit des amerikanischen Volkes,
so hatte das reiche, beinahe universelle
Bunde mit
Wissen des Verfassers im
seiner sicheren Menschenkenntnis
und
Kiinstlerklar-
heit hier ein wahrhaft monunientales Werk zustande gebracht. Unleugbar hatte Miinsterberg wahrend eines zwolfjahrigen Aufenthalts mehr iiber Land und Leute nachgedacht und gelernt als die grosse Mehrzahl eingewanderter oder auch hier geborener
Deutschen.
Denn gerade
der Deutschamerikaner tragt wunder-
barer Weise eine krasse Unkenntnis des amerikanischen Lebens
im
volleren Sinn des VVortes zur Schau.
halten es anscheinend
fiir iiberfliissig,
anderen Stammes anders lassen.
auf rein geschaftlichem
als
Meisthin bezeichnen wir diese kurzweg
und betrachten und behandeln ist,
Viele in unserer Mitte
sich mit ihren Mitbiirgern
durchaus als Aussenseiter.
als
Wege
einzu-
,,Amerikaner"
wenn der Ausdruck gestattet Wahrend Miinsterberg das Typi-
sie,
sche des Amerikanertums bei einem Hauflein Auserwahlter sucht, verfallen wir gemeinhin in den noch schlimmeren entgegengesetz-
ten Fehler
und halten uns an
haben wir Deutschen ja
fiir
die rohesten Elemente.
Ueberhaupt
die hasslichen Auswiichse
an einer
:
Patriotische Betrachtungen
82
Volksphysiognomie einen scharferen Blick als fiir die schoneren Ziige. So ist es manchem von iins ziir zweiten Natnr geworden, in geradezu unverantwortlicher Weise iiber alles Amerikanische ins
Blaue hinein zu verallgemeinern
;
gerade wie ein deiitscher
Weltaiisstellungsbeamter, der in meiner Gegenwart das Malheur hatte, dass seine spiegelblanke Lackstiefelette iiber eine iinserer belebtesten
beim Uebergang
Fahrstrassen mit einem erratischen
woranf der junge Herr mit einem Blick massloser Verachtnng aiif die Ursache seines Missgeschicks mir den zerschmetternden Wahrspruch zuschleuderte Knhfladen
Beriihrung
in intime
,,Echt amerikanisch
trat,
!"
nun glaube, dass bei engerem Zusammenschlusse der deutsch- und der englischsprechenden Elemente manches leidige Missverstandnis aus der Welt geschafft und ein innerer Zusammenwuchs angebahnt wiirde, dessen Vorteile keineswegs von dem Deutschen mit dem Preise seiner angestammten Eigenart zu Weil
ich
bezahlen waren, deshalb halte ich nachfolgende Erorterungen
Denn meines Erachtens konnen
nicht unzeitgemass.
Umschwung
in der jetzt
w^ir
fiir
einen
abwarts gleitenden Volksmoral Ameri-
kas nicht durch einseitiges noch so lautes Betonen vereinzelter
Grundsatze oder durch einen gelegentlichen steifen Ansturm ge-
gen diese oder jene Hochburg nativistischer Beschranktheit herbeifiihren. Mit solchen Mitteln lasst sich hochstens hie und da ein zeitweiliger Sieg erringen, der auf beiden Seiten viel Erbitterung zuriicklasst
und
die unterlegene Partei bei der ersten Gelegenheit
zu noch verzweifelteren legislatorischen Dummheiten treibt. Das Heil hangt vielmehr einzig und allein davon ab, ob es gelingt, die offentliche
Meinung durch unausgesetzte
zu beeinflussen und,
wo
notig,
Ich fiirchte nicht, mir den verscherzen,
wenn
ich
erzieherische Arbeit
umzustimmen.
Namen
eines guten
Deutschen zu
nun ganz aufrichtig ausspreche, was mir
bei der anzustrebenden reformatorischen Tatigkeit als das Aller-
notigste
fiir
uns selbst erscheint: namlich, ein Quentchen Selbst-
reform oder, wenn dies weniger hart edelung.
klingt, ein
wenig Selbstver-
Patriotische Betrachtungen
Wir haben
in
den letzten Jahren sehr
unsere Tiichtigkeit zu horen allzuviel.
ein
Man
bekommen
;
83 viel
verzeihe es der redlichen Absicht,
Wort hervorwagt,
Lobendes
iiber
fast will micli bediinken,
wenn
sich hier
das weniger schmeichelhaft anzuhoren und
dennoch der Beachtiing nicht unwiirdig sein mag. Es kommt mir namlich ziiweilen vor, als ob iinter tms Dentschamerikanern
Genugsamkeit Platz gegriffen habe. Man kann ja freilich imserem offentlichen Gehaben nicht viel Schlimmes nachsagen wir stehen in bezug auf politische und biirgerliche Rechtlichkeit relativ sogar hoch, obschon wir uns von Korruption durchaus nicht vollig freigehalten haben. Aber auf eine Tugend,
eine falsche sittliche
;
die bestenfalls in Unterlassung der Niedertracht besteht, unseren
Ruhm
zu bauen, ware abgeschmackt.
Nun, wir konnen ihn gottLegen wir jedoch
lob auch auf positive Leistungen begriinden.
den ehrenvollsten,
d. h.
den strengsten, Massstab an uns selber an,
so wirft sich uns eine ganze Reihe
Art
auf.
von Fragen recht verfanglicher
Haben wir dem amerikanischen Leben
unserer Wesenheit starkwillig aufgepragt?
die besten Ziige
Sind deutscher Ide-
Treue und Lebens gepolitischen Sauerteig unseres Opfermut der deutscher worden? Auf das glorreiche Wirken unserer deutschen Pilgervater auf diesem Boden haben wir ein gutes Recht stolz zu sein. Aber wir sollten auch unbefangen priifen, ob unser eigener Beitrag zu den geistigen und moralischen Werten Amerikas, und alismus, deutsche Tiefe
ware er an
sich
und
Griindlichkeit, deutsche
noch so imposant,
in
einem genijgenden Ver-
haltnis zur fiihrenden Stellung des deutschen schaft,
ten
Kunst und Literatur
steht,
und ob wir
mit den Kulturfortschritten unseres
in
Wissen-
selbst Schritt hal-
Geburtslandes
andernfalls steht uns die Befugnis nicht zu, uns einer iiberlegenen Bildung zu betrachten.
Volkes
als die
;
denn
Missionare
Platter, diinkelhafter
Widerspruch vermag die eine Tatsache nicht aus der Welt zu schaffen, dass das Volk der Dichter und Denker im neuen Lande einer arg vergroberten Lebensweise huldigt; dass hier,
wo
der
Erwerb einen unverhaltnismassigen Raum im menschlichen Ge-
Patriotische Betrachtungen
84
dankenkreise einnimmt, Knnst, Poesie nnd Wissenschaft audi
im Deutschtiim eine sehr untergeordnete Rolle spielen. Doch wenden wir tins nach dieser fliichtigen Selbstbeschau nun dem Landsgenossen ohne Bindestrich zii, den wir nach meiner Ansicht viel zu ungeniigend kennen nnd mit dem wir nns weit besser bekannt machen miissen, weil er schon durch seine Ueberzahl den bestimmenden Faktor der offentlichen Meinung ansmacht. Ich will anch dem Amerikaner keine Komplimente drechWenn wir ihn wenig kennen, so tragt er selbst zum grossen seln. Fiihrt er doch ein wahres Doppelleben, dieser Teil die Schnld. „Amerikaner/' Wilhelm von Polenz soil einmal geaussert haben, der Amerikaner sei der reinlichste Mensch an seiner Person und dabei der grosste mnnizipale Schweinigel.
Diese skrupulose per-
sonliche Sanl^erkeit, die hier nicht in Frage gezogen
und
soil,
die unbezweifelbare bodenlose Lotterei in der Oefifentlichkeit
einen durchgreifenden Unterschied.
sind
wohl symptomatisch
Im
Privatleben zeigt sich der Amerikaner als
Hauswirt, Gesellschafter
fiir
abgesehen
hat,
seine
kehren.
Wahrend
sellschaft
ein
im und
herrscht, so sind
Rijcksichtslosigkeiten
in
nicht
Lichte als
er es anscheinend darauf
allerunliebenswerteste
somit
tadelloser,
Familienmann,
in ungleich vorteilhafterem
im Geschafts- und Strassenleben, wo
Ton
werden
der selten
offentlichen
Seite
Hriuslichkeit ein
herauszu-
und
Ge-
wahrhaft vornehmer
Leben
alle
erdenklichen
Riipeleien an der Tagesordnung
;
ein
Mangel an Lebensart herrscht iiberall, wo fremde Menschen in grosserer Zahl zusammenkommen, und emporende Unarten wie beispielsweise das ekelhafte Ausspucken auf Biirgersteigen und der Strassenbahn werden von den wohlerzogensten Menschen widerspruchslos geduldet, weil in einem demokratischen Staatswesen vermeintlich ein jeder tun und lassen darf was ihm beliebt und keine Klasse sich ihre Manieren von einer Dass bei aller Ungeanderen vorschreiben zu lassen braucht.
widerlicher
schliffenheit unser Volksleben
auch schone Ziige aufweist, ver-
dient gerechtermassen hei-vorgehoben zu werden.
Namentlich
Patriotische Betrachtungen
Hochachtung des Amerikaners Aufmerksamkeit gegen sic, der man
85
Frau und seine zarte in alien Standen begegnet, der unverkenntliche Ausfluss einer wahrhaft ritterlichen Gesinnung. Schade, dass aiich diese Ruhmesmedaille ihre Kehrseite ist
die
hat
;
fiir
die
anders gesagt, dass sich der Amerikaner
fiir
die
dem schwa-
cheren Geschlecht erwiesene Hoflichkeit an seinen mannlichen
Mitmenschen aufs griindlichste schadlos tige Mittellage zwischen
halt
— dass
er die rich-
ungehoriger Vertraulichkeit und einer
an Grobheit streifenden Kiirze so schwer
Von
trifft.
altersher
sind diese Erziehungsmangel alien Besiichern des
Landes aufgeund unzahligemal an uns geriigt oder belacht worden, und doch ist von einer Besserung der amerikanischen Umgangsformen nichts zu merken. Sehr wohlwollende Beurteiler wollen nun in alldem nur ein kleines Uebermass einer an sich nicht hoch genug zu schatzenden Nationaleigenschaft, namlich eines iinmerwahrend regen Unabhangigkeitssinns erblicken. Wer aber alien fallen
Anstandsregeln hohnspricht,
um
seinen ,,Freiheitssinn" vor der
Welt laut zu bekunden, der besitzt nach meinem Dafiirhalten weder ein richtiges Gefiihl fiir die Rechte seines Nachsten, noch einen feineren Sinn
Denn
diese
wahrt
fiir
man
seine eigene
sich
am
besten.
innere
Unabhangigkeit.
indem man
keiten der Konvention ihren Zoll entrichtet.
in Aeusserlich-
Je wahrhaft freier
der Mensch, desto weniger Roheit haftet ihm an.
Freilich wird
aber der Geist der Selbstbestimmung kulturlahmend, ja kulturver-
heerend wirken,
Auf
wurde.
und Wehe der
Hat
sich
wenn
er nicht durch friihe Disziplin geziigelt
Haus und Schule geht das Wohl Republik am letzten Ende zuriick.
die
Erziehung
unsere
in
Erziehung ihrer hochsten Aufgabe ge-
Schulmanner haben ihr die Unfahigkeit vorgevvorfen, ein Volk mit kraftig ausgepragtem Biirgersinn heranzubilden. Mit noch grosserer Berechtigung kann
wachsen gezeigt?
sie
fiir
korum
Einsichtsvolle
unseren bedauernswerten Mangel an offentlichem Dezur Verantwortung gezogen werden.
erwahnten Werke deckt
Hugo
In seinem vorhin
Miinsterberg die wahre Quelle
unserer padagogischen Misswirtschaft auf.
„Wo
das Bewusst-
86
Patriotische Betrachtungen
der
sein
Identitat
so
tertan
lebhaft
zwischen
den
Autoritat
politischer
Einzelnen
erfiillt,
schwer halten, das Gefiihl des Respekts
fiir
und
da
Un-
wird
es
irgend ein Indivi-
Das Gefiihl der Gleichheit wird sich wo Natur nicht Gleichheit gewollt hat, vor allem zwischen der Jugend und dem Alter. Eine gewisse Respektlosigkeit wird sich in der Familie ausbilden und wird dtiuni einwurzeln zu lassen.
auch da vordrangen,
die
ungestraft bleiben, weil sie oberflachlich
dem
politischen
System
des Landes zu entsprechen scheint; die Eltern werden es selbst
zur Theorie erheben, dass Kinder gebeten und iiberredet werden miissen,
und dass
und dass
es falsch sei, sie zu
die Schule
zwingen oder zu
im selben Geiste vorgehen
miisse.
strafen,
Und
so
wachst eine Jugend auf die niemals die Segnungen eines ausseren ,
Zwanges, einer strafenden Zucht empfunden hat." Auch folgende bedeutsame Stelle des zweiten Bandes behandelt das Kapitel von
dem
in Freiheit dressierten
Jung-Amerika
:
j,Heute herrscht als
padagogische Grundmaxime eine widersinnige Uebertragung des Gleichheitsgedankens von der grossen sozialen Welt in die Kin-
Es gilt als ein Dogma, im Grunde jeden Zwang und, wenn moglich, jede Strafe aus der Erziehung zu beseitigen und derstube.
jeden Fortschritt und jede Besserung durch den Appell an die Einsicht und den guten Willen des Kindes zu bewirken.
ganze Erziehung und Schulung bewegt
Bahn geringsten Widerstandes.
sich
Das Kind
eigenen Neigungen folgen, und alles das letzte
Konsequenz jener Anerkennung
schen alien Personlichkeiten."
ist
Die
demgemass auf der soil
durchaus seinen
im Grunde nur
die
sozialer Gleichheit zwi-
Die chauvinistische Verblendung
des Amerikaners erschwert es den wenig zahlreichen mutvollen
Kritikern unseres offentlichen Schulwesens, mit ihrer
durchzudringen.
Ja man muss
sich
Meinung
wundern, wenn trotz der
und wann Fachmanns die gefahrliche Kraftprobe ablegt. Tatsachlich ist im Lande der freien Rede nichts so verhasst wie freimiitige Kritik und nichts so beliebt und einAussicht, von der Krippe fortgejagt zu werden, dann
die Ueberzeugungstreue eines
87
Patriotische Betrachtungen traglich wie hohle Lobhiidelei.
Von dem
altesten Kultursitz des
ist zweimal im Laufe der letzten Jahre ein beherzigenserklungen, leider ohne einen dauernden NachMahnriif werter
Landes hall
zii
wecken.
Der hochverdiente
greise
Professor Charles
Norton schloss vor etwa vier Jahren seine Abschiedsrede an die Harvarder Abiturienten folgendermassen ,,So ziehet denn hinaus, ihr Jtinglinge, imd waltet Eiires Bertifs im Lande. Dieser Eliot
:
Beruf aber bestehe darin,
ziir
Kiiltivierung
unseres bildungs-
armen, halbzivilisierten teuren Vaterlandes nach Kraften beizuKurz darauf bekannte sich Prasident Eliot von der tragen." gleichen Universitat kiihl besonnen zu der Ueberzeugung, dass
unsere offentliche Schule ihrer Aufgabe, die junge Generation mit den hohen Idealen der Biirgertugend zu erfiillen, bisher nicht Freilich verschwieg der ausgezeichnete Schul-
gerecht wurde.
mann, dass
hoheren Bildungsanstalten einschliesslich
es tim die
Colleges" in gedachter Hinsicht nicht besser steht. Es ware hier nicht am Platze, auf die Unzulanglichkeiten unseres
der grossen
,,
Erziehungswesens Punkt
fiir
Punkt einzugehen, ebensowenig wie
auf ihre auch von europaischen Autoritaten anerkannten Vorziige. Nur zum geringeren Telle, darauf allein sei hingewiesen, fallen die
Schwachen unserer Schulerziehung der Lehrerschaft
Im
wesentlichen sind
giiltigkeit lich
gegen
Nutzlichen
alles,
sie
zur. Last.
das Erzeugnis der allgemeinen Gleich-
was ausserhalb der Sphare des handgreif-
liegt.
Zu seinem
eigenen Unheil hat hier der
Laie die Macht, seine sogenannte „praktische" Auffassung der Dinge als obersten Grundsatz dem Lehrgang und Betrieb der Da es ihm im Grunde mit offentlichen Schulen aufzunotigen. der Bildung nur insoweit heiliger Ernst ohne unniitzen Zeitverlust gegen bare
ist als
sich ihre Friichte
Miinze an den Mann Realfacher in sogenannten bringen lassen, so verdriingen die Volks- und Biirgerschule immer mehr die humanistischen Disziplinen.
Der
und mittleren
praktische Standpunkt der niederen
Schulen einschliesslich der „High recht wohl verteidigen.
Wenn
es
Schools'* lasst sich natiirlich
nur dabei bliebe
!
Aber so
be-
88
Patriotische Betrachtungen
eilen sich die
hoheren Lehranstalten, also Colleges und technische
Hochschulen, mit charakteristischer Unterwiirfigkeit, auch ihrerseits die
Befehle der offentlichen
Meinung zu
Publikus ein unverbcsserlicher Erfolganbeter Universitaten mit einander
um
Weil
vollstrecken. ist,
so wetteifern die
Um
die hochste Frequenz.
des
man inbezng aiif Vorbildimg und Studiengang der Horerschaft die weitestgehenden Ziigestand-
grossen Zulaufs willen macht
dem unerfahrenen und
In den meisten Colleges wird
nisse.
der Regel nicht allzu ernstveranlagten
,,
Freshman"
die
in
Auswabl
der Kollegien ganzlich anheimgestellt und dadurch seine geistige
Ausbildung oft der Gefahr, ausgesetzt.
Auch
stiickhaft oder einseitig zu
auserhalb des Horsaals wird
dem
werden,
amerikani-
schen Musensohn ein reichstes Mass von Freiheit gewahrt.
Der
Zauber des Studentenlebens zieht gewiss mehr junge Leute nach der Hochschule als die gelehrtesten Professoren, grossten Bibliotheken und besten Laboratorien.
Freilich hat das amerikanisclie
Studentenleben nicht das deutsche Geprage.
In seinem Mittel-
punkt steht
statt Kneipe und Paukboden der athletische Sport. Kein guter Deutscher wird mit einem einzigen missgiinstigen
Worte der Jugend
ihre natiirliche
froher Leibesiibung triiben wollen. so
ist
und gesunde Lust an
Was
frisch-
auch ihre Eigenart
sei,
ja doch die amerikanische Athletik desselben Geistes Kind,
der in Deutschland die Turnerei geboren hat.
Hingegen sind
die
Auswiichse der akademischen Athletik aufs entschiedenste zu verurteilen:
die Roheiten, namentlich
beim Fussballspiel
;
die
Kniffe und Finten, welche die kampfenden Parteien gegen ein-
ander ausspielen; vor allem der verachtliche Schachergeist, der sich in die athletischen Korperschaften eingeschlichen hat sich in allerhand
kundet.
Den
Lug and Trug und
und
verachtlichen Brauchen be-
argsten Uebelstand bildet
in
unseren Colleges das
Nach der Auffassung der Studentenschaft mehr der tiichtigste Professor. Kein Wunder, wenn die
Berufsathletentum.
bringt ein schneidiger Fussballspieler seiner ,,Alma Mater"
Ruhm
ein als
Herren Athleten so sehr von dem Bewusstsein
ihres
Wertes
Patriotische Betrachtungen
dtirchdrungen sind, dass
den Atifenthalt auf UniversitaKommilitonen teuer bezahlen lassen.
sie sich
ten voii ihren ehrsuchtigen
Wirklich bekommt infolge dieser ,,
Trainer"
fiir
Ziistande ein
stehen?
ganz gut
Coach" oder
Gehalt eines ordentlichen Professors.
Sollte diese Abschweifiing ausser
Thema
,,
seine Leistungen verhiiltnismassig das Drei- bis
dem
Fiinffache von
89
Beziehung
zu
unserem
Alle zustandigen Behorden sehen
Nicht doch.
dass das Athletentum, wie es jetzt betrieben wird,
ein,
der Pflege vornehmerer akademischer Ideale hindernd im Allein
steht.
dem Unfug
Wege
steuern hiesse sich der offentHchen
Meinung widersetzen, und dazu besitzen Kiiratorien, FakiiUaten und Prasidenten einfach nicht den Mut. So kommt es, dass auch die Pflegestatten der Wissenschaft mit dem Strom der offenthchen Meinung treiben, statt, wenn es not tut, gegen ihn zu schwimmen und ihm neue Betten zu bahnen und anzuweisen. Wenn man einer oftgehorten Klage Gehor schenken wollte, so stiinden unsere Fakultaten in einer Art Untertanenverhaltnis
zu den iibermassig reichen Griindern und Gonnern der amerikanischen Privatuniversitaten.
Dies
stellt sich bei
unbefangener Un-
In der Regel machen diese ManWucht ihres Einflusses in keiner egoistischen Weise gelAn Ausnahmen fehlt es leider nicht, und das unentwickelte
tersuchung als unwahr heraus. ner die tend.
Standesbewusstsein des Gelehrten suggeriert ihm daher von selbst
mahnt zur Vorsicht. In WirklichDruck von ganz anderer Seite aus und zwar von der
einen ,,Druck von oben" und keit geht der
grossen Masse, die unter ten
,,
dem
hypnotischen Zauber der sogenann-
Captains of Industry" steht und deren Urteile gedankenlos
ubernimmt.
Schhesshch
ist
auch die Auflehnung einzehier Gebil-
deten gegen die Verpobehuig des akademischen Lebens ziemlich belanglos.
rend der
Kaum vom
gehort verhallt wirkungslos ihr Protest, wah-
Glanze seiner MilHonen umstrahlte Dollarkonig
der beifalh'gen Aufmerksamkeit der halben Nation gewiss
ist.
Die grossen Herren aus diesen Kreisen wissen dies und handeln danach. Mit einem Stolze, der weissgott einer besseren Sache
Patriotische Betrachtungen
90
Unbildung oder Halbbildung die Pfuscherei ztir Maxime. Die Welt hort grossten Albernheiten aiidachtig an, und der
wiirdig ware, pocheii sie
und erheben so dreist aus ihrem Mtinde die Fortschritt
stellt
seine
ihre
aiif
Gangart nach der Uhr dieser Schosskinder
Die meisten von ihnen predigen das unverbliimte Evangelium des pekuniaren Erfolges. Ein Wortfiihrer dieser Richtiing begriindete kiirzlich mit kostlicher Logik die neue Er-
des Gliicks.
ziehungstheorie.
Noch
nie,
so verkiindete er, boten sich der
jungen Mannerwelt ahnliche Gelegenheiten zu einer glanzenden Laufbahn.
Denn, versicherte
er,
die grossen ,,Korporationen"
sehen sich verlangend nach den tiichtigsten Kraften halt spielt bei der Anstellung fiir solche
um;
das Ge-
Leute gar keine Rolle
Er selbst sei zu seinem grossen Bedauern etwas zu fruh Welt gekommen, um fiir seine eigene Person aus der giinsti-
mehr. zur
gen Konjunktur Nutzen zu ziehen. Mit anderen Worten, es tut diesem grossen Volkserzieher aufrichtig leid, statt 3 4 Millionen jahrlich bloss
sich
i
—2
—
Millionen einzustreichen.
Ueber den Einfluss solch erfolggekronter Haupter gebe man Jeder Tag bringt neue keiner falschen Beruhigung hin.
Beweise, welch unbegrenztes Vertrauen
Manner vom Schlage
des
oben zitierten Dollarkonigs im offentlichen Leben geniessen. In In den alien wichtigen Fragen fiihren sie das grosse Wort. Synedrien der Politik haben setzes Sitz
sie
Kraft eines ungeschriebenen Gesie mit
Alle feierlichen Anlasse zieren
und Stimme. In den Kuratorien der Hochschulen und
ihrer Gegenwart.
otheken sind
sie in
der Mehrheit.
Bibli-
Bei ihnen erholt sich der be-
triebsame Zeitungsmensch Rats in alien schwierigen Lebenslagen. Sie tun kaum die Lippen auf, so spitzt Publikus das Ohr. Ich bin uberzeugt,
wenn Herr
J.
Pierpont
Morgan oder Herr John D.
Rockefeller den tollen Einfall hatte, eine Vorlesung iiber die Verwandtschaft des Finnischen mit dem Petschenegischen zu halten, er brauchte in keiner
Zuhorer verlegen zu Vielleicht habe
amerikanischen Stadt
um
den Saal und die
sein.
ich
den Einfluss der kommerziellen Macht-
Patriotische Betrachtungen
inhaber
wesen
es
ist,
in
einem demokratischen Staats-
Lenkung des Volkswillens
die
einer mit besonderer
Denn
ausgestatteten Klasse zu iiberantvvorten. sollte
man
die
im Lande,
in
ist
Wahnes
sich des
nung nur Dies
Es kam mir darauf
unsere Erziehung iiberschatzt.
atif
an zu zeigen, wie verfehlt
Summe
entschlagen, als
sei die offentliche
kommt
Mei-
die Resiiltierende aller Willenskrafte.
nicht der Fall, weil jeweilig ein betrachtlicher Teil
der nationalen Willensenergie lahmgelegt
gebunden
Stiicken
Macht
ein fiir allemal
oder Potenz aller individuellen Meinungen
anderem Bilde
darum
91
bleibt.
nirgends rein
zum Ausdruck.
am
jenes Element in ihr
aus
oder
ist
freien
Das naive Bewusstsein der Masse Bald farbt
Daher
dieses,
bald
im hochstei'. Grade wiinschenswert, dass die moralisch Tiichtigsten und geistig Entwickeltsten sich an der Erzeugung des Volksgewissens am kraftigsten beteiligen.
starksten ab.
Die Gebildetsten
es
ist
kommen
hierzulande zu
wenig zu Worte.
Der Lehrerstand zumal halt wie schon angedeutet mit seinen wahren Ansichten zu gern hinter dem Berge. Dafiir reden Prediger und Juristen zvvar reichlich, aber sie beschranken sich meistens auf die Breittretung gefahrloser Selbstverstandlichkeiten.
Noch auf wiesen.
Es
ist
Umstand sei hingeLosung sittlicher Fra-
einen weiteren bedenklichen nicht abzustreiten, dass zur
gen ganz einfacher Art die Unterscheidungskraft der sogenannten offentlichen
Meinung
beziiglich solcher
Meinung
ein,
hinreicht.
Nichtsdestoweniger
Fragen gleich eine Teilung
in
tritt selbst
der offentlichen
sobald sie aus der platonischen Sphare in die prak-
und an ein leibhaftes, greifbares Thema herantreten. In Amerika erfolgt diese Spaltung (wie anderwarts) gemeinhin nach Massgabe einer schon bestehenden Parteiung. Nur
tische hiniiber
unterscheidet sich unser Parteiwesen, namentlich
Leben, rikaner
durch ist
seine
kein
dualistische
Freund
der
Organisation. feineren
im
politischen
Der
Schattierung,
Ameder
Er fallt seine Entscheidung am liebsten nach dem altbewahrten Schema: entweder Gut und oder. „pers6nlichen Note."
—
:
Patriotische Beirachtungen
92
Zudem
schlecht, dazwisclien erkennt er keine Ntiancen. ilin
Meinimg unterzuordnen,
lichen Parteiwohl die eigene
politischer Hinsicht besser geschult teils
kostet es
keine grosse Ueberwindung, deni wirklichen oder vermeint-
ist
als
weil er in
der Mitteleuropaer,
aber anch weil er seine geistigen Rechte weniger hochhalt
als jener.
Um
seines Gewissens willen sich klipp iind klar ziir
Gegenpartei zu schlagen bedeutet alien Einflnsses.
fiir
den Politiker den Verlust
Selbst in einem einzigen Punkte sich gegen die
Partei aufzulehnen stempelt den Parteimann iind zieht politische
man
Entwurzelimg nach
zum „Mngwiimp"
sich.
In vielen Fallen
Demokrat ohne innere Griinde, aus blossem Familiensinn, weil der Vater und der Grossvater So bewahraiich schon zu der Grand Old Party" gehort haben. bleibt
ein Republikaner oder
,,
heitet sich das
Goethe'sche
Wort
Vernunft wird Unsinn, Wohltat Plage. Weh dir, dass du ein Enkel bist.
—
Die mogliche Erleuchtung der offentlichen Meinung durch Parteipolitik an Geist und Biirgertugend hoch iiber-
eine die
ragende Personlichkeit, wie
sie
uns durch einen seltenen Gliicks-
Karl Schurz beschieden war, bricht sich an dem starren Fanatismus des politischen Lebens. Nur von den Zinnen der fall
in
Partei herab soil das Licht in die
Masse dringen.
Die gleiche graue Eintonigkeit bedeckt alle Felder der geistigen Tatigkeit. Welches Land der Kulturwelt hat eine so farblose Literatur wie das freie, selbstbestimmte
Amerika?
Wo
wird
noch infolge der Unduldsamkeit gegen Originalitat solch ein Gotzendienst mit Gemeinplatzen getrieben? Wo werden mittelmassige Talentchen so oft
Wo
als
Genies bejubelt?
In einem
Wort:
herrscht ein annahernd gleicher Notstand an scharf profi-
lierten Personlichkeiten ?
Fasse ich meine Betrachtungen zusammen, so erscheint mir die sogenannte offentliche Meinung als das gemeinsame Fabrikat des tausendkopfigen Durchschnittsmenschen und des geriebenen
Patriotische Betrachtungen
Machers, die
vereiiit
93
den Widerstand der iinabhangigen
genzen besiegen oder ihn mit Leichtigkeit neutralisieren. es
etwa die Gebildetsten
vind Besten oder
waren
es
Intelli-
Waren
im Gegenteil
empfindsamen Banaiisen und die schlauen Tri^ibfischer, die den Krieg mit Spanien heraufbeschworen? Die gleich darauf die
die
Vereinigten Staaten in ein ebenso nutzloses wie gefahrenschwangeres Kolonialabenteuer stiirzten
?
Es soil nicht gelengnet werden, dass die offentliche Meinung manches gnten Gedankens bemachtigt, manche niitzliche Reform ausfiihrt, nnd alle Jubeljahr einmal nnter dem Antrieb
sich
wohlverdienter Gewissensbisse eine erlosende Tat vollbringt
Ueberhaupt
beispielsweise die Sklavenbefreiung.
mus
des Amerikaners gar nicht schwer zu weaken
leicht das
Opfer nervoser Ueberreizung.
ist
—
der Idealis-
niir wird er zu Alsdann verf alien wir ;
unserer schlimmsten Volkskrankheit, der Hysterie, gegen deren
Ausschreitungen das Nation, ja unter
Wort
der Weisen, das Rechtsgefiihl der
Umstanden sogar
die
vom Volke
selbst einge-
setzte Autoritat sich machtlos erweist.
Zur Verdeiitlichung des Vorstehenden diene der schmach-
Auswuchs des amerikanischen Volkslebens. Ich meine Lynch justiz, die, statt vor der wachsenden Kultur allmahlich zuriickzuweichen, gerade wahrend der letzten Jahre unerhorte Orgien gefeiert hat. Denn bekanntlich begniigt sich vollste
natiirlich die
heute die ausschweifende Volkswut nicht mehr, ihr ausersehenes
Opfer
,,with
promptness and dispatch"
nein, unsagbare, raffiniert
ins Jenseits
zu expedieren
:
grausame Scheusslichkeiten begleiten
diese Mordsuchtsanfalle eines gemiitsrohen Pobels.
Und, was Lynch
das Schlimmste an der Sache, die Jnrisdiktion des Richters
tiber den ,,schwarzen Giirtel" hinausffehende Kompetenzsphare an. Wo ist nun der Ursprung dieser schimpfHchen und anscheinend unheilbaren Verirrung des Massenin-
masst sich schon eine
stinkts zu
am
Doch gewiss
suchen?
in
der geistig und moralisch
tiefsten stehenden Schichte menschlicher Gesellschaft.
hier aus dringt bei
dem
von unten nach oben.
freien Spiel der Krafte die
Von
Ansteckung
Patriotischc Bctrachtungcn
94
Noch
ein weiteres Beispiel sei angefiihrt.
In mehreren der
Siidstaaten besteht der ehrsame Branch, dass der Vater oder
Madchens den Verfiihrer mit der MordFederlesens iiber den Hanfen Vorgang dann gewolmlich in den Zeieinfache schiesst, welcher tnngen als ein ,,Dneir' geschildert wird. Zwar schiitzt den TodBrtider eines verfiihrten
waffe iiberrnmpelt nnd ohne
schlager der
,,
Aber
es
gnng.
Genius loci" nicht vor strafgerichtlicher Verfolist
noch nie vorgekommen, dass
fiir
solch ruchlose
Gewalttat einem Menschen ein Harchen gekriimmt worden ware.
So
will es die offentliche
Richter ans
dem
Meinung, nnd
ein
hochangesehener
Siiden erklarte mir vor nicht langer Zeit, der
Usus habe seine nnd vieler seiner Kollegene riickhaltlose Billigung. Das Erstannliche an der Sache ist m. E. nicht die Uebernahme des Racheramts durch private Hande, denn beleidigte Familienehre fiihrt anch anderswo, nnd gerade in Dentschland mit
am
hanfigsten, znr anssergerichtlichen Ziichtigung des Schul-
dieen.
Stannenswert nnd beschamend
verstandlich
ist
vielmehr die
hingenommene Beiseitesetznng des
als selbst-
Gesetzes,
die
Herabwiirdigung seiner Hoheit durch ein possenmassiges Scheinverfahren und die Konnivenz der Richter. Solche Erscheinungen sind geeignet, auch den unentwegtesten Optimisten nachdenklich zu stimmen.
Meinung zwar nicht, wie in den angefiihrten Fallen, im offenen Bunde mit verwerflichen Tendenzen, aber, was am Ende nicht gar viel besser, sie stellt sich abseits und betrachtet die grobsten Ausschreitungen Viel ofter noch finden wir die offentliche
privater
und solidarischer Willkiir mit einer Gemiitsruhe,
fiir
welche leider nichts anderes als eine verhartete dleichgiiltigkeit Es fallen jahraus, jahrals zureichende Erklarung dienen kann.
Menschenopfer unerhort, bloss weil die offentliche Meinung beide Augen zudriickt gegen die beispiellose Fahrlassigkeit im
ein
Verkehrswesen, sowie gegen die verbrecherische Unvorsichtigkeit bei der Erbauung und dem Betrieb von Theatern und anderweitigen Unterhaltungslokalen.
Bei jedcr schlimmen Katastrophe
Patriotischc Bctrachtungen
95
Amerikaner einen nicht genng zu riihrnenden Opfersinn, einen iiber jeden Zweifel eiiiabenen Heldenmnt an den Tag. Werden aber die Dinge besser? Allerdings, gehen auf einer legt der
Eisenbahn
statt der statistiscb vorgeschriebenen Rate von zwei Personen im Tage gleicb ein paar Diitzend auf einmal elendigbch zugriinde, oder fordert die Habgier eines Bauspeku-
bis drei
lanten,
an
Theaterbesitzers,
Menschenleben,
Schiffseigentiimers
kommt
so
iinter
dem
Beistand der Sensationspresse die offentliche
Wochen.
in die
Man
gebnis.
Docb
eine Fehlgeburt
ist
ein
Massenopfer
geburtshilflichen
Meinimg
plotzlich
das jedesmalige Er-
beruhigt sich, und alles bleibt beim alten.
Fortschritts der alte
Ueberwie oft im privilegierten Lande des Scblendrian das Marschtempo trommelt.
Gegen
toten
hanpt
ist
es merkwiirdig,
die
Macht der
Gewohnheit erhebt sich nicht leicht Man denke einmal an die Heka-
ein erfolgreicher Widersprnch.
tomben bliihender Menschenleiber, Juh,
dem
die hier alljahrhch
am
vierten
eigenthchen Nationalfeiertag,
Tradition in
dem grausen Moloch den Rachen geworfen werden. Der Tag verdiente
wahrhaftig im Kalendar schwarz
statt rot angestrichen zu werSein Verlauf erinnert in manchen Gegenden beinahe an den bethlehemitischen Kindermord. Wie verhalt sich die offentHche
den.
Meinung gegen den grauHchen Unfug? Abstellung zu tun, kauft
sie
Statt etwas zu seiner den Heben Kleinen das Feuerwerk
und sonstige Werkzeug zur Selbstverstiimmelung.
Abermals
ein
deutHches Zeichen, wie die
Dummheit iiber den Verstand triumphiert. Denn welcher verniinftige Mensch verurteilt nicht den sinnlos morderischen Radau? Wer beklagt darin nicht die torichte Verkehrung und Verhohnung wahrer Vaterlandsliebe ?
Und
besteht nicht trotz alledem der „GIorious Fourth" in seinem
unverfalschten
Vollends
kommt
— der
Vandahsmus weiter? in
unserem korrupten Staats- und Stiidtewesen
—
Langmut oder Faulheit wie man's eben nennen will offentlichen Meinung zu unverkennbarem Ausdruck. Wahdie
rend die Volksvertretung mit drakonischen Gesetzen gegen das
Patriotische Betrachtungen
96
siindhafte Sonntagsbier iind
den physischcn
Pesthaiich der Zigarctte sich und das ganze zivilisierten
sich tiefer
Wie
und
moralischen
Land vor der
iibrigen
Welt blamiert, diirfen die offensichtlichsten Schaden und immer tiefer in unser Volksleben hineinfressen.
gross die offentliche Apathie, zeige wieder ein konkretes
Ein Patriot von echtem Schrot und Korn verteidigt auf arg exponiertem Posten die Ehre seiner Stadt gegen eine Beispiel.
ruchlose Rotte politischer Brandschatzer. liches
die
Fahnlein schart sich
vox popnh nicht
um
Aber nur
den Braven.
ein unansehn-
Warum
erhebt denn
? TatsachHch Anstandsmenschen
Kriegsgeschrei
ihr chernes
schaut der grosse Haufe der sogenannten
dem
mit verbliiffender Gleichgiiltigkeit
ungleichen
Kampfe
zu.
"Ich habe mit mehreren Ihrer angesehensten Mitbiirger das
Thema
angeschlagen, aber wenig Anklang gefunden," so sagte
zu mir ein bekannter Soziologe,
,,ja,
ich fand sogar zu meiner
Verwunderung, dass manche Leute die ganze Geschichte lachenswert finden und sich nicht entbloden, dumme Witze dariiber zu reissen." WirkHch bekundet sich in solch ekelerregender Weise nur allzuoft der gepriesene amerikanische Humor, der oft hellen
nichts weiter
ist als
der bequemste Abfluss einer seichten Lebens-
auffassung.
Und nun nung.
Es
zu
dem
treucn Spiegelbild der offenthchen Mei-
gibt selbstverstandhch bei uns eine Reihe
aus anstandigen und mit Blattern.
Wenn
sie sich
geleiteten
nur beziiglich ihrer Zahl und ihres
satzes mit den Zeitungen gegensatzlicher ten,
von durch-
vornehmem Hterarischem Sinn
Um-
Richtung messen konn-
der beriichtigten ,,gclben Presse", die mit geflissenthcher
Preisgebung jeglichen lioheren Berufes den gemeinsten Instinkten des Lesepobels den
gung
Hof
macht.
Zur Erklarung und Entschuldi-
Missgewachses wird von amerikanischer Seite verschiedenthch ein Scheingrund angefiihrt, den auch Prodieses unheilvollen
Er versichert namHch, nicht Masse gebildeter sei und Besseres verweniger lesebegierig sei, konne auf deut-
fessor Miinsterberg geltend macht.
weil in Deutschland die lange, sondern weil sie
Patriotische Betrachtungen
97
schem Boden die gelbe Presse nicht fortkommen. Dieser Behauptung gegeniiber liesse sich jedoch nachweisen, dass audi in Deiitschland Blatter mit enormen Auflagen bliihen und mit weit grosserer Fiille
und Mannigfaltigkeit des
Inhalts; dass aber die
deutsche Zeitung auf einem unvergleichlich hoheren moralischen und schriftstellerischen Niveau steht als die amerikanische. Die
Mehrzahl
der
amerikanischen
schwach im Berufsernst.
kommt am
versteht,
Journalisten
Wer am
ist
unglaublich
geschicktesten zu lavieren
Wer fragt nach des ZeiUeberzeugung ? Wer stosst sich daran,
besten vorwarts.
tungsmanns ureigener infolge Verkaufs seiner Zeitung der federgewandte Leitartikelverfertiger nach dem Grundsatz „Wes Brod ich esse, des
wenn
Lied ich singe" von heut' auf morgen eine funkelnagelneue Ge-
Oder wenn wahrend einer erregten Wahlkampagne in einer und derselben Werkstatte fiir beide Lager Waffen geschyiiedet werden? Zur Leichtfertigkeit der redaktisinnung anzieht?
onellen Aeusserung gesellt sich ein zweiter Uebelstand
:
die Zen-
Jawohl, wir haben alien Ernstes eine Zeitungszensur und
sur.
noch dazu die strengste und
willkiirlichste die
man
sich
denken
Ja sogar eine doppelte. Will eine Zeitung reussieren, so muss sie sich als Organ der Oeffentlichkeit in keinem Punkte der Sie muss ihren Spalten jeweiligen Stromung widersetzen. kann.
mit angstlicher Vorsicht alles fernhalten, was mit der Begriffsund Vorstellungswelt des grossen Publikums an irgend einer Stelle
zusammenprallen konnte oder was
Umkreis hinausgeht.
iiber diesen
Bodenlose Banalitat
ist
beschrankten
die Folge.
Nun
er-
heben aber neben den Anforderungen der Leser auch ressen eines besonderen Gonnerkreises ihre geheiligten
die Inte-
AnWohlfahrt materielle die denen von spriiche Hiervon ist die Folge, dass des Blattes am meisten abhangt. drunten im Kontor statt droben auf der Redaktionsstube das letzte Wort iiber den Zulass jeder Zeile, jedes Wortchens fallt. :
die der Inserenten,
meines Wissens schon vorgekommen, dass bei einer ausbrechenden Epidemic die tagliche Bekanntmachung der Erkran-
Es
ist
kungen auf Vorstellungen
eines
Konsortiums von grossen In-
Patriotische Betrachtungen
98 serenten
plotzlicli
liin
Man
iintcrblieb.
stand gerade vor der
Wahrscheinlichkeit eines rcgen Fremdenverkehrs, iind die Furcht
vor flanem Geschaftsgang iiberwog in jenem Kreise die Angst vor der Seuche. In deni literarischen
Wert der amerikanischen Presse liegt Der ,,Arizonastir'
das Geheimnis ihrer Erfolge erst recht nicht.
des dentschen Witzblattes entbalt bei aller Uebertreibiing eine zutreffende Charakteristik des landlaiifigen Zeitiingsstils.
Wenn begibt, ist,
sich sonach die amerikanische Zeitung
Motiven ihrer Stellung
niitzigeh
wenn
sie
aus
eigen-
Volkserzieherin freiwillig
als
ferner aiich in formalem Sinne minderwertig
man
so muss, sollte
meinen, ihre oftgeriihmte Ueberlegenheit
VoUkommenheit des Nachrichtendienstes und der Berichterstattung zuriickfiihren lassen. Wahr, biindig und gefalhg, sich auf die
das sind die sicheren Kennzeichen guter Reporterarbeit. drei
Punkten
lasst
der deutsche
In alien
KoUege den Amerikaner weit
hinter sich.
Man
vergleiche einmal das Personal einer deutschen oder
deutschamerikanischen Zeitung mit
dem
eines englisch-amerikani-
schen Riesenblattes.
Sehr selten ist der amerikanische Reporter den Anforderungen einer grosseren journalistischen Aufgabe ge-
So wurde
wachsen.
z.
B. der
enorme
Stoff,
den die
St.
Louiser
Weltausstellung den Zeitungen bot, nur von deutschen Zeitungen, hiesigen
und
Gegenstandes annahernd
iiberseeischen, mit einer des
wiirdigen Griindlichkeit, ja auch nur mit aufgearbeitet.
In englischer Sprache
schalste Gewasch,^ mitunter
dem
ist
gebiihrenden Ernst
im
allgemeinen
auch trostloser Stumpfsinn
Weltausstellung verbreitet worden.
So
das
iiber die
steht es eben mit der
amerikanischen Zeitungsschreiberei, und es wird und kann nicht besser werden bis sich die Einsicht
Journalistenberuf ausser
dem
Bahn gebrochen
hat, dass
zum
unentbehrlichen „Wuppdich" und
der obligaten fabelmassigen Geschvvindigkeit audi ein bisschen
Verantwortlichkeit und
—
Quentchen Schulw'6.Ye von der wohltatigsten Wirkung und der grossten Tragweite. Denn jedem Sinn
fiir
bildung gehoren.
ein paar
Eine Reform des Zeitungswesens
;
Patriotische Betrachtungen
Denkenden
leuchtet ein, class
99
ohne die Mitarbeit der Presse eine
dauernde Gesundung- der offentlichen Meinung nicht herbeizufiihren
zn
ist.
stellen.
Es ist purer Unsinn, die Macht der Presse in Abrade Audi diejenigen haben unrecht, die da g-lauben, die werde
Schadlichkeit des Sensationsblattes
Aiigen springende Verlogenheit aiifgehoben.
durch
seine in die
Leider besitzt unser
Publikum nicht mir eine unersattliche Neugier, sondern es ist zuEs ist ein psycho-
gleich leichtglanbig bis zur Bewnsstlosigkeit.
logisches Ratsel, wie
man
tagtaglich die Zeitungskost zu sich
nehmen kann ohne zu merken, dass man verfalschte Nahrung geniesst. Tag fiir Tag liefert dem Amerikaner sein Leibblatt die starksten Proben von Unzuverlassigkeit, wie z. B. wenn er iiber Vorkommnisse liest, bei denen er zugegen war, und es ist an dem ganzen Bericht kein Sterbenswortchen wahr. Er tut zwar gewohnhch,
als sei
Wort und
als verlasse er sich in alien
gegen das gedruckte Dingen auf seinen eigenen
er ausserst misstrauisch
Verstand, aber das
ist
zum
grossen Telle eine Selbsttauschung.
Unter der Schwelle des Bewusstseins wird selbst der vorsichtigste Leser von der Lektiire beeinflusst. Die Speise aber, die ihm aus der journalistischen Sudelkiiche gereicht wird, wird nach und nach vermittels eines
unaufhaltsamen
Stoffwechsels
in
,,offentliche
Meinung" umgesetzt.
Zu
der oben getadelten
Langmut
der Masse stimmt ganz und
gar die laue Duldsamkeit der Presse.
wann
Hochauf
lodert
dann und
ihre ,,saeva indignatio" iiber diesen oder jenen Uebelstand
von kurzer Dauer. Auch richtet sich der Angriff allemal gegen vereinzelte Krankheitssymptome statt bis zum Herd der Entartung vorzudringen. So halite vor kurzem der doch die Entriistung
ist
ganze dichte Blatterwald von dem lauten Zetergeschrei wider, das sich gegen die strafwiirdige Missverwaltung gewisser Versicherunsfssfesellschaften erhob.
Weshalb
sinn unserer Presse nicht schon langst
denn der Gemein-
dem schmutzigen Treiben
Magnaten einige Aufmerksamkeit geschenkt? Weshalb Argusaugen fi.iir das verdachtige Gebahren blind, ihnen Tom Lawson, der edle Ritter, die Erleuchtung brachte ?
jener
blieben ihre bis
hatte
Patriotischc Bctrachtungen
lOO
Und
hatte nicht
die
heit zu iintersnchen,
Presse die
Pflicht,
bei
dieser
wcsens im Geschaftsleben Missbrauche bestehen, denen teil
Gelegen-
ob nicht audi ausserhalb des Versicherungs-
zum Vor-
unseres internationalen Rtifes gesteuert werden sollte?
Frei-
Hch findet der Tief stand des Zeitungswesens seine Erklarung und eine Art traurige Entschuldigung in den vordersten
Am
der Gegenvvart.
Ende hat
ja in der
Tendenzen
Tat jedes Volk
die
Presse, die es will, d. h. die Presse, die es verdient.
Nun
sprechen aber die Anzeichen unwiderleglich, dass in
unserer Volksmoral
in
neuerer Zeit bedenkliche Verschiebungen
stattgefunden haben, dass die strengen Tugenden der Vater den
bequemeren und eintraglicheren Maximen eines neuen Geschlechts den Vorrang iiberlassen.
Umwertung
In der bedauernswerten
Werte
spielt
wohl
die
Staaten die wesentlichste Rolle.
Erfolgen der neuen Politik in kindischer
jener alten moralischen
der Vereinigten
jetzige Machtstellung
in
Seit
den blendenden ausseren
Krieg und Frieden schwelgen wir
Und wahrend
Selbstbewunderung.
weise Ratgeber
wie Grover Cleveland und der nun leider dahingegangene Karl
Schurz mit der vollen Wucht ihrer Ueberzeugung die Blicke des Volkes auf seine Mangel lenken und mit mannhafter Stimme unser nationales Gewissen an die nachstliegenden Aufgaben erinnern, speisen
und
kitzeln die
Steuermanner des neuen Kurses
und Selbstiiberhebung Jung-Amerikas. paar Stellen aus der Rede des Herrn ein dienen Beleg Als Elihu Root auf dem grossen Chicagoer Parteitag ( 1904) ,,From all our great population active in production and commerce and die Selbstzufriedenheit
:
and intellectual and moral life to a degree never History affords no parallel before attained by any people in any age or country for the growth in natural greatness and social progress
.
.
power and honor,
etc
.
"
Dies hochtrabende Lob selbst seitens der einsichtsvollsten riecht, aber Parteifiihrer tout zwar entschieden besser als es
—
noch viel besser kliinge es in
fremdem Munde.
Derlei Posaunen-
loi
Patriotische Betrachtungen
von hoher Warte befestigen uns in dem gefahrlichen Glauunsere eigene Vollkommenheit und erschweren dadurch an ben die Selbstdisziplin, deren wir so sehr bediirfen. Von dem Werte unserer bisherigen Errungenschaften, die ich wahrhaftig nicht stosse
ohnehin zur Geniige
gering veranschlagen mochte, sind wir
Drum
durchdrungen.
soil
auch die patriotische Kritik zu Worte
kommen. mich in diesen Betrachtungen von dem soeben aufgestellten Grundsatze leiten liess, durfte ich mein Augenmerk vornehmlich auf die wunden Punkte in unserem offentlichen Leben richten, ohne mir, so hoffe ich, durch meine Offenheit den Weil
ich
Es
Vorwurf der Norgelei zuzuziehen.
das weiss ich genau,
gibt,
gewissen Kreisen eine summarische Art von Gegenkritik. Man diinkt sich unwiderleglich, wenn man dem Kritiker mit dem Rat in
aufwartet
:
„Wenn
es
Ihnen bei uns nicht
nur schleunigst Ihren Koffer und
gefallt, so
viel Gliick
auf den
packen Sie
Weg !"
wahrer Patriot wird sich durch derartige Albernheiten redlichen Arbeit nicht storen lassen.
dankbare, aber
um
Es
ist
eine
Ein
in seiner
zwar weniger
desto dankenswertere Aufgabe, mutig an der
Veredelung des Vaterlands zu arbeiten als aus seinem moralischen Niedergang materiellen Nutzen zu ziehen und entweder aus diesem Grunde oder aus stumpfer Unwissenheit zu allem, was unter
dem
rotweissblauen Aushangeschild gesagt und getan wird,
Ja und Amen zu sagen und Hurra zu schreien. Deshalb aber haben wir, die wir uns Amerikaner nennen, weil wir auf dieser Erde unsere Heimat dauernd aufgeschlagen haben, !
nur dann das Recht, auf die Unvollkommenheiten der anierikanischen Zivilisation tadelnd hinzuweisen, wenn wir uns im Dienste des neuen Vaterlands unablassig strebend bemiihen.
Lebt der
Deutsche dieser hochsten Verpflichtung nach, so wird sich ihm hierzulande ein reicher
Amerikaner in
sein heisst
dem Schosse
anderem
Freuden
erschliessen.
— unfertig
sein,
und
unabgeschlossener Zustande ruht eine unermess-
„Die Wirklichkeit", sagt Miinzunachst eine sittliche Aufgabe, und gerade weil
liche charakterbildende
sterberg, „ist
Quell geistiger
— unter Macht.
:
Patriotische Betrachtungen
102 die
Welt unvollendet,
hart,
unschon
Arbeit verlangt, gerade deshalb das
ist
iliren
ist
ist
und
sie
iiberall
umgestaltende
unerschopflich wertvoll
der Grtindton nnd wird es bleiben, solange die neue Welt
Idealen treu bleibt."
Dem bau Oder zeichnet.
Deutschen
Umbau Er
ist
seine spezifische Beteiligung an
amerikanischer Kultur klar und
zielt
nicht auf die
Erbauimg
dem Auf-
deiitlich
eines Staates
vorge-
im Staate,
noch wird er sich anderseits damit begniigen wollen, mechanisch als Karrner die Steinchen herbeiziischleppen, auf dass sie die Bauherren und Werkmeister der neuen Kultur als blosses schen den grossen Bausteinen verwerten.
Fiillsel
zwi-
Legen wir daher auf
unsere deutschen Sonderinteressen nur insofern Gewicht als dies
Zukunft des ganzen, nach Vollendung seines Charakters ringenden Amerikanervolks von uns heischt. Ist meine Darstellung der gegenwartigen Zustande nicht von die
Grunde aus verkehrt, so folgt mit logischer Konsequenz mehr als je des deutschen Idealisten.
:
die Re-
publik bedarf heute
Jeder denkende Beobachter sieht ein, dass die Entwickelung Amerikas an ihrem schicksalsschweren Scheidewege angelangt ist. Sie gipfelte in einer noch nicht verflossenen Periode beispiellosen
Mitten in einer Epoche des grossartigsten industriAufschwungs traten die Vereinigten Staaten aus der von George Washington in seiner Abschiedsrede empfohlenen volkerpolitischen Reserve heraus und erhoben sich mit elementarer Kraft zum Range einer Grossmacht. Unter dem wuchtigen Druck dieses Aufschwungs mussten zunachst einige der edelsten Traditionen des jungen Volkes verflachen. Was Wunder, dass grelle Selbstgefalligkeit das Wesen des modernen Amerikanertums durchfarbt, dass Selbstbetonung und Selbstdurchsetzung zu vorwaltenden Charakterzijgen zu werden drohen und der echte Patriot der Furcht vor dem Verlust der miihsam gewonnenen ide-
Wohlstands. ellen
alen Giiter
Raum
zu geben beginnt?
Amerika soil verhindern helfen, dass der platte Wirklichkeitssinn der Gegenwart den ganzen ferneren Werdegang unseres Volkes durchdaure und bestimme.
Der deutsche Idealismus
in
Patriofischc Betrachtungen
zeichnete sich von jeher aus durch sicheren
Der Deutsche Sinn ein
seine historische Mission unci durch riickhaltslose
fiir
gabe an
103
Drum
sie.
hoher erzieherischer Faktor,
Das vermag
Fortschritts.
Hin-
ergreife er mit Freudigkeit seinen Beruf als ein treibendes
er aber nur dann,
als
Element echten
wenn
er sich mit
eisengepanzerter Entschlossenheit auf der vollen Bildungshohe
Somit
seiner Zeit zu halten weiss.
ist
ernste Selbstkultur
fiir
uns
das dringendste Erfordernis. In ursachlichem
Zusammenhang mit
der Erkenntnis dieser
Verpflichtungen steht das Verhaltnis des Deutschamerikaners zu deutschen sowie zur amerikanischen Mitwelt.
und
siindhaft, sich durch
Es ware
toricht
Loslosung von der einen oder der ande-
NachkomEr muss mit beiden Fiihlung Vermittler. So werden bei ihm die
ren seines besten Einflusses auf den Charakter seiner
menschaft mutwillig zu berauben. behalten als ihr natiirlicher
Reichtiimer zweier Zivilisationen aufgestapelt, wird durch ihn der Gtiteraustausch bewerkstelligt, und in seinen er will, als
Lohn das
Handen
bleibt,
wenn
Allerkostbarste zuriick.
Diese Auffassung birgt ferner den kategorischen Befehl, uns mit
dem
deutschen Geistesleben, das an der modernen Kulturarbeit
noch immer den hervorragendsten Anteil hat, in gesteigertem Grade zu beschaftigen. Es aussert in der Gegenwart eine unverkennbare Kraft. mutvoll
um
Allenthalben sehen wir
neue Ideale kampfen.
Jeder
Tag erzeugt im Bereich Werke und wer aus
der Kunst und Wissenschaft beachtenswerte
dem Studium
ihrer Erscheinungen die
bedeutende Manner
;
Ueberzeugung
schopft,
und wissenschaftliche Produktion in reicher Wechselwirkung mit den Wirklichkeiten des Daseins ist, dass sich das deutsche Leben stetig kraftigt und doch zugleich verfeinert, der wird aus dem Grunde seiner Seele wiinschen miissen, dass auch wir Amerikaner desselben Geistes einen Hauch verUnerlassliche Bedingung hierzu ist, dass das deutsche spiiren. dass die kiinstlerische
Leben
in
Amerika grosszugiger werde, dass zugunsten ernsten
zielgewissen Bildungsstrebens die Anspriiche der Geselligkeits-
und Gemuthlichkeitspflege und vor allem die des blossen
Zeit-
Patriotische Betrachtungen
104
vertreibs in Familie
und Verein strenger
als bisher
eingeschrankt
werden.
Abkehr von den Freuden und Friichten Kein Verniinftiger wird von uns verlan-
Ich predig-e nicht die praktischer Tatigkeit.
gen, dass wir
im Wettlauf nach praktischen Zielen hinter MitStammes znriickbleiben und dieweil wir ideelle
biirgern anderen
Luftschlosser bauen, uns prellen lassen. als
Es hat
Johann Gottlieb
um
Fichte.
hundert Jahren gesprochen
Welt nicht
die greifbaren Erfolge des
Lebens
nie einen iiberzeugteren Idealisten gegeben
:
Folgendes sind seine Worte, vor ,,Dass Ideale sich in der wirklichen
darstellen lassen. wissen wir.
.
.
.
Wir behaupten
nur, dass nach ihnen die Wirklichkeit beurteilt
und von denen, werden miisse." Und an anderer Stelle predigt er den Idealismus der Tat also ,,Nichts hat unbedingten Wert und Bedeutung als das Leben; alles Uebrige, Denken, Dichten und Wissen hat nur Wert, insofem es auf irgend eine Weise sich auf das Lebendige bezieht, von ihm ausgeht und in dasselbe zuriickzugelangen beabsichtigt." Die Wirklichkeit modifizieren, dazu gehort in der Tat viel Kraft und viel Mut. Waffnen wir uns daher in der Riistkammer die
dazu Kraft
in sich fiihlen, modifiziert
:
unserer glorreichen Geschichte und treten wir mit Habebald und Haltefest, den Gewaltigen des neuen Kurses, unerschrocken den
Strauss an,
Es
gilt
unsere Stammesehre.
Wir
miissen dafiir sorgen,
dass der oft geriihmte deutsche Idealismus denen, die nach uns
kommen, diesem
nicht zu einer blutleeren Abstraktion erstarre.
Wege werden
wir Jiingeren imstande
sein,
Nur auf
das Lebens-
werk unserer ausgezeichneten Vorganger zu vervollstandigen, zu verjiingen, zu vertiefen.
Otto Heller. Washington University,
St.
Louis,
Mo.
GERMAN SETTLEMENT
BERLIN. A
IN
WATERLOO
COUNTY, ONTARIO, CANADA.* Anyone going East on
the Chicago Flyer, having passed
Stratford, a junction of various local lines with the
the
Grand Trunk, on
things.
One
is
its
road to Toronto,
will
They
names, Baden, Breslau, Berlin. settlers
of
be struck by two
a general appearance of prosperity in a monot-
onous, unattractive country; the other a series of
man
Main Line
have taken up their abode
German
local
clearly indicate that Ger-
in these districts.
They are by no means the only ones in Canada. Though the German element is not as prevalent as in the States, there is yet hardly a county without some German village or hamlet. In the States the proportion of the German contingent to their ninety million of inhabitants
greater than their fraction of the only
Moreover, one can
Dominion of Canada.
six millions in the
hardly say that the
is
German
settlements as such have so great an
Canada as they had and In Canada they are islands are having in the United States. surged round by the waves of a very mixed population with a influence on the national development in
;
predominance of the native element, almost obliterated in the There is no well Germanized West to correspond to States. the
French
East
Canada.
Nevertheless,
the
Germans
that
are there are looked upon by their neighbors with great respect
on account of their
thrift,
trying to uphold their
diligence
German
and sober
habits,
and are
individuality against the natural
inroad of Anglisation.
The
settlement in Ontario
is
numerically the strongest.
consists of about 20,400 people.
*Read
in the
Germanic Association, U.
Nova
It
Scotia and Manitoba
of P., Jan. 14, 1807.
(105)
io6 Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont., Can.
follow second and third, the numbers going on decreasing as one travels both East,
and West.
West
In the
the
most important
•Indian Reserves are to be found, while the East
New
Montreal,
Brunswick and Nova Scotia
—
—Quebec
is
with
almost entirely
Yet there are sprinklings of German settlements on the remotest islands, Vancouver and Prince Edwards Isle the latter having about seven hundred of them. A claim to real German municipal life, though naturally adapted to the laws of the Dominion, can only be granted to the wealthy and important places as found in Waterloo and Manitoba; the most prominent of these is doubtlessly the little but extremely active town of Berlin. under French influence.
—
On
the whole,
it is
the various colonies.
difficult to trace
Direct settlement from the mother country
hardly took place in the early days.
was due frequently
States
Even
in
counties,
the historical origin of
like
Early immigration into the
to religious persecution of sectarians.
Northern Germany, Scandinavia, Aus-
where schism as such was ordinarily winked at, Mennonites and Anabaptists found no mercy for their tenets, as their creed forbade them the bearing of arms and service in the army. tria,
Now
Canada, while
in
French hands, was jealously guarded
immigration of Non-Catholics. Even native French Huguenots were excluded naturally, no alien heretic of any kind could enter, nor would it have been any gain to him. But when mismanagement and unsuccessful warfare had given the whole of the Dominion into the power of Great Britain, against
;
the bar of religious prejudice tion
fell.
The when
first
impetus to immigra-
from the States was given, in 1785 the final secesAmerican Union from the English mother country
sion of the
severed
all
their given
connections with a king to
word
still
felt
pledged.
whom
the Mennonites by
Together with a large band
of Loyalists they struck for the Canadian frontier, neither halted
nor hindered by the young United States Government, choosing the
lands around and above
Lake Ontario.
It
was a
place,
Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont.
though not ill-favored as almost unsiirmountable
and
to climate
difficulties to the
fertility,
Can.
,
107
which offered
Pioneer Settlers, yet
it
was potentially capable of great commercial and agricultural development.
The
laborious settlers, by felling timber, draining
and constructing roads, have turned a wilderness into a
swamps fruitful
country.
There
is
no doubt the
first
immigrants were, almost to a
man, Mennonites, but soon the German townships developed also into strongholds of Lutheranism and German Baptist Churches, with handsome buildings, an
church
grounds,
The its
is
self
little
town of
Berlin,
which
among
her twelve thousand inhabitants
Town
has a claim to such a
truly her founders
August, 1906, celebrated
in
Canada."
title, if
one considers that really and
have turned the desolation of the wilderness
Of
into a fruitful plain.
upon the
in
eight thousand pure-blooded Germans, and calls her-
proudly "The Best It
Catholic Cathedral,
Jerome's, in extensive beautiful
St.
almost exclusively under English-Irish direction.
centenary, counts
more than
Roman
In Berlin a huge, fine
life.
with seminary and school,
ministry and an active
efficient
course, she could not improve greatly
intolerable dulness of the landscape, even
by planting
a very pretty park, Victoria Park, with a small deer preserve
and running brooklets, furthermore adorned by a handsome bronze bust of the late German Emperor. William I. The Pavilion of this park
was signalized only
of a festive banquet
—
quite
German
year by being the scene — "with (by request last
beer,"
town tendered to the Prince tour through Canada, He was invited to
of the illustrious visitor) which the
of B'attenburg on his Berlin, not
by virtue of being a member of the Imperial house of
Great Britain, but distinctly of being "a German."
melancholy charm of a wide, rolling country
is
Even
the
utterly destroyed
by a huge array of smokestacks, for Berlin quite an important industrial centre. We have also indicated that it is a town emii's
io8 Berlin, a Germayi Seitlemeyit in Waterloo County, Out.
,
Ca?i.
nently proud of itself, but it must be conceded, not with the languid old-world pride of past grandeur, long since resting on its
oars
—no reason
for that
stant enlargement
—but the pride of youth, growth,
con-
and conscious improvements.
new
compared with the other ramshackle edifices along the track, the good solid buildings for business and private residences, all bespeak success and plenty, Its
spruce
station, as
a thrifty, home-loving, house-proud population. It is
German
a pity that the general impression has nothing of the
—
where "Hiitt' an Hattchen lehnt sich traut" ways of living had taken hold already of the first settlers, and now the whole residential part of the town strikes one like the prosperous suburb of any middle-sized city in the States. There are the two business thoroughfares, crossing at right angles, with trolley cars jingling through them, though only to meet the trains. Even the working population invests first of all in a snug little home wood, with an outside covering of bricks, yellow or white, showing well-kept yards and even character
—American
—
attempts at orchards.
There
is
hardly any pauperism
in Berlin.
The whole
yearly
almost
is below $250; by the returns of the dog tax which adds On greatly to the importance and dignity of Master Canine.
output for poor
singularly, this
relief is
entirely defrayed
meeting such a rate-payer one gets a supercilious wink and a perfunctory wag. The electric, the gas and the water plants are in the
hands of the corporation.
and very expensive for increasing
its
They
are to
acquisitions, so that the
some extent recent town exchequer is
funds before tackling the building of a new
and handsome town hall. The sewerage and drainage are said to be model plants, keeping Berlin one of the healthiest towns in the Dominion. It has a handsome post office and custom house, a fact that must be mentioned specially, if one looks back upon the unsurmountable difficulties the first comers had to face to get their mail
and any other connection with the
rest of the
—— ;
Berlin, a
A
world. ings.
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont., Can.
Carnegie Library
It is
the newest of the
glass,
and
—
situated
quite a pretty architectural effect.
German
literature
;
in fact, I
shelves are filled with
am
prepared to
German reading;
In the schools the instruction
is
German
classes of the public schools
on a corner
lot
well stocked with
It is
newspapers of Berlin and the other towns
my
Pubhc Build-
of the approved pattern, a grey stone building, with
oak woodwork and plate
makes
is
109
say,,
nearly half the
German
it
also has the
in
Waterloo County. upper
in English, yet in the
tuition
is
imparted.
Due
to
I had no opportunity to be present at one of the lessons, yet on the blackboard I found well-known remnants in German script, questions worded in German, showing
very short stay,
a fair average standing of the class.
The Kindergarten
babies,
with their flaxen hair, fat cheeks and round blue eyes, remind
one of any similar gathering
in a
Thuringian or Saxon school-
They sing German ditties and talk German to each other young lady at the head of the department albeit very efficient in managing her obstreperous little charges, The buildings are airy, does not manage the German tongue.
house.
unfortunately, the
comfortable and well kept. Naturally a young town like Berlin, moreover one exclusively inhabited by an industrial population, cannot boast any art treasures.
Doubtless the future will bring these with growing wealth
and extending views.
It is
not deficient in local talent.
Paste:
Heinrich Rembe, in his two small volumes, "Aus der Einsamkeit einer Canadischen Landpfarre.," strikes
owner and
Jno. Rittinger,
command
many
editor of the
quite a lyrical vein, and apart
mental and vocal music,
is
from
eagerly cultivated.
these two melodic branches, the
a sweet note.
"]o\ivr\7i\,'"
is
Mr.
said to
literature, instru-
The exponents
of
town band and the "Sanger-
verein," as they occur in small bailiwicks, have sometimes experi-
enced somewhat rough handling, by the reports handed to history, but let
it
be said that Berlin
is,
down
and has reason to be
proud 01 her famous Nineteenth Regimental Band, and that 1876 the
first
"Sangerfest" was celebrated.
in
no
Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont., Can.
industrial centre, however, Berlin need not hesitate
As an
many
to enter ranks with cities
times removed from her in size
and age, on either side of the globe. Her sons claim that whatever kind of industry they engage in, they do it, and do it well,
and that
their industry
They have
always leads to success.
typical small town man's local pride, yet this
is
the
the great lever
home industry. Just as every workman aims at owning home he lives in, so the inhabitant of Berlin uses by preference things "made in Berlin." The leading industries are in the Furniture business. Dry Goods, Hardware, also Clockmaking, to raise
the
Buttons, Boots and Shoes, Footwear in all
felt
and rubber.
Canadian towns, the furriers are playing quite a
naturally the small
output in
all
part,
Like
and as
town cannot furnish demand for a large
these branches, there
is
a large export trade, not
only with Canada and the States, but with Europe. uninteresting the town may be to the who walks the clean streets, very empty unless He is a the times when the factories disgorge their hands. fall night can he a victim to hopeless boredom, glad when at
Commonplace and casual stranger it
be
prey
to an
occasional
stop over.
One-Night-Stand-Company, that happens to is one wonderful attraction in the drone of
Yet there
this busy-bee-life of the
hundred-year-old town,
when we
con-
For a hundred years sider what it has been, how it was settled. ago these well-ventilated large factories, those neat, comfortable dwellings, ensconced in the green of their own yards, were a howling wilderness.
There was swamp nearly from Toronto to
Hamilton, and the watercourse, the Grand River,
like so
many
Canadian rivers, either a rapid torrent in the time of the spring freshets, or, fair
dryed up by the summer heat, a gravel
show of quicksands. It was to a most uninviting neighborhood,
desert,
pit,
with a
to a pathless
wreaking with malaria, sandy plains that seemed to defy brave settlers from Bucks and Alleghany*
agriculture, that the
*The old Allegheny County
in Pa.,
neighboring Bucks and Franklin.
1
Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont.
Can.
,
1 1
Counties wended their way, partly prompted by loyalty to their
Sovereign
in
their subtle later
England, to
whom
they had sworn allegiance which
Mennonite conscience could not discard
partly, in
;
who had gone home made it difficult
companies, drawn by friends and relatives
ahead, while the increasing population at
them to maintain their farms. Going west on the Grand Trunk from Montreal, or going up the St. Lawrence, passing where for
"Old
Lawrence sings and smiles Ontario's Thousand Isles,"
St.
Round Blue
we a
reach a Peninsula extending into the Great Lakes, roughly
square with
mainland.
It
its is
eastern
corner cut off where
bordered
on
the
northeast
Huron and
by
the
joins
it
Geor-
the
Lake St. Lake Huron and Clan- between the two great waters; Lake Erie washing the whole shore. On the east it is separated from American soil for a short distance by nothing but the Niagara River and Falls, going with a slight deviation directly from south to north, joining Lake Erie to Lake Ontario. Between them, however.^ the dismal swamp of Beverly cut off the land from
gian Bay, the northwest by Lake
—
—
civilization.
It is
the small
obvious that a district
set right into the junc-
ture of the Great Lakes had unparalleled advantages for navigation,
but equal disadvantages as to
soil,
climate and roads.
It
was a low-lying country, with no natural facilities for draining the fenns and marshes of Hamilton and Toronto, now the t?wo important governmental towns, both on the banks of Lake Ontario, only the former, then called Little York, existed at
and had
that time
any kind
to be
approached for every legal transaction of
the other, Hamilton,
;
was nothing but a
section of the
dismal swamp.
The
was held by
district
Na-
Indians, the so-called Neutral
tion.
These were tribes that did not take part in the bloody war-
fare
between
neutrality
In spite Hurons and Iroquois. were put out of existence one
they
of
their
day
by
112
Beylhi, a
German
Settlement in 'Waterloo County, Ont., Ca7t.
war between England and Enghsh side and the French France tlic opposed them, driving them forth from the West. A greater part of them remained loyal during the Revolutionary War, In the
the treachery of the Iroquois.
Iroquois were on the
and they were rewarded by the grant of the lands of the former Neutral People, six miles on each side of the Grand River, which the
Chippewas had been using as hunting grounds, and which to hand to the Iroquois and their
King George bought from them
Brandt; soon they were convinced that was too large for them, and they returned the surplus land to the Crown, the Crown being the middleman between seller and purchaser. The part called Wellington, later Waterloo County, came into the hands of Richard Beasley, James The tract, containing 94,012 Wilson and John B. Rasseau. as was said "Not a bad price" for a acres, went for £8882 leader
Josef
this district
;
:
trackless wilderness.
Beasley bought out his partners.^ but burdened the property with a mortgage which later threatened to be fatal to the
settle-
ment.
About the same time, the closing year of the eighteenth century, when American independence was well established, several new Mennonite colonies were founded, and the settlement on the Grand River began in good earnest. There had been two groups of Loyalists
Dutch— the
in the States
active ones
who had
and among the Pennsylvania
taken up arms, and had to pre-
cipitate their egress unless they testified their allegiance to the
Union, and the passive ones
who had
not engaged in fighting,
only done some hauling for which they had been reasonably paid.
They could
take their time in the removal of their goods
and chattels; and though close dealers and of not very gushing enthusiasm, it was loyalty that made them prefer the Canadian
from the new government. Two men, Joseph Schork and Samuel Betzner, from Franklin County, were the real pioneers, for they came into a country where wilderness to tempting
ofifers
German
Berlin^ a
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont.
roving trappers and traders, the best
by
terized
Faces
what
is
now
known among them
charac-
Schork crossed the river and settownship Boon; Betzner, West, near
called Blair.
All along the Niagara River, also in
York
113
to the Indians.
East, near the later
tled
Can.
nickname, "Old Dodge," had been the only Pale
his
known
,
York County, along
north of Toronto, settlements had sprung up But for the Waterloo or Wellington district these two men were the first home-makers. It was not without effort that they had started on a march across country which was to end thirty miles beyond civiliza-
the
street
since 1795.
But the unquenchable energy of that hard-headed, hard-handed race knew, where there was ground, it might be tilled waste, it might be redeemed, where man had trodden once, he might walk again. Their stock in trade was moderate capital, business shrewdness, unflinching industry and strict honesty with whatsoever contracting party. tion, practically
next to nowhere.
;
They changed
house in Pennsylvania for tracts of land and bought a yoke of oxen and a sled; thus in a truly patritheir
new home, the hardships of we can hardly realize that only a times and our express flyers. The day
archal fashion they set out for the the journey being such that
century
lies
between those
marches could only be times first
more
short, for the animals
than one night,
Not a
to be covered.
and
all
and
to pass
site
was a bottomless
kind of pavement or bridge, being joined built to get the
some-
had Face was at that time to
so called "Corduroy Bridges"
it
to rest,
the distance to Buffalo
single Pale
be found in Buffalo; Hamilton's
had
mire,
—logs forming a —had be
fiute-like
to
teams over.
In Dundas, then a lonely outpost in the midst of the marshes there
was a small
township,
first
Huron maybe ;
and
store.
that "little mill
Nevertheless,
Betzner senior,
mill
Dundas
is
now
a flourishing
Hamilton on the line to Port and store" was its first nucleus.
station west of
—
the next year,
it is
1800,
not clear whether he
new settlers arrived: was the father or elder
German
114 Berlin, a
Settlement in Waterloo County,
brother of Samuel Betzner
— and
0?it.,
Reichert, also the
a certain
They must have
Sigerich family from Lancaster County, Pa.
convoy consisted of no
been quite wealthy, for their
Can.
than
less
one cart with six horses, twelve oxen, twelve sheep, two saddle horses. They had to undergo great hardships of all kinds man and beast seemed to succumb to the fatigue. At last they reached ;
weeks of traveling. The same from Montgomery County make They crossed the Niagara at the "Flats." One for Waterloo. of the newcomers, Clemens, drove the first horse team through end after
their journey's
saw seven
year, i8(X),
Beverley
Now
Swamp.
five
families
this
swamp had
to be passed every time
ground or to get any provisions. the settlers Little York being the county town, they had to hie them thither for the use of the post office, for any legal transaction, to learn This latter fact, of any publication that might interest them. namely the inability of getting prompt cognizance of their legal affairs, proved nearly fatal to the young colony. The Government, their grain
wanted
according to
its
well-wont policy, offered these loyalists no as-
sistance,
Li 1800 a
school
little
was founded by
a
man named Rittenwho had shown
house; at the same time a miller named Miller,
sympathies for the American struggle for independence, and
had
in
consequence
owned, founded a have been a
where the
lost the
little
thousand acres of ground he had
gristmill
and store
real inroad of civilization, for
settlers
had not
clearings, there
in Gait,
we have was
which must to
remember
trackless desola-
and wolves. No doubt, the sturdy pioneers would have kept on improving, clearing, sowing and reaping, if a blow had not suddenly threatened them which would fain wrest from them their hard-
tion richly populated with bears
earned homes.
It
came from a
side
probably only the fewest knew about
where no one expected it
;
it;
the old forgotten mort-
gage of £2000, with which Richard Beasley had encumbered the Beasley had been plying a busy trade with his "lots," land. when a "gentleman," name unknown, whom Samuel Betzner
Berlin, a
met on
his
of time,
the
German
way
him about the affair. In course connection was slow, such news reached
to Toronto, told
though postal
reconsidered matters,
home country; would-be-immigrants had
Beasley
and
Ont, Can. 115
Settlement in Waterloo County,
his
land
potential value for the buyer
on
his
and
settler, for
He now came
pletely unproductive.
hands;
it
it
had only a was still com-
forth with an offer to the
settlers; they should form a joint stock company and buy sixty thousand acres from him. This would bring practically the whole of the county into their hands, incidentally lift the mortgage
and free them from
their
joint liability.
Probably the
faith
Richard Beasley was
alof the straightminded Mennonites in ready shaken, yet they had to agree to his plan, having no
other
way
retraced their relatives
In 1804 the pioneer settlers, Betzner and Shork,
out.
in
way
to Pennsylvania, to interest their friends
the plan, and raise the necessary
money
and
for the
transaction.
was most discouraging. Both in Franklin County and in Cumberland the members of the communities seemed to have become reconciled to American citizenship. The proposal
The
result
of emigration "into that far-off country," moreover to live again "under a crown," and brace again the hardships of first settler-
any of them. They designated the Canadian settlement as a failure, and it might easily have become one the brethren it was spurned by the government in the new, by ship, did not appear to
—
in the old
home.
Happily, the Great Central
Power
in
Heaven held a
dif-
ferent view from the one ruling in St. James, connected with Little York (now Toronto), by big and involved strands of red tape.
The two embassadors, heavy-hearted and
dejected,
were
on the point of returning. In fact, Shork Here was the Betzner, however, went to Lancaster County. Eby, Benjamin Bishop them, of One home of the brothers Eby. Watersettlement of is still to play an all-important part in the did so in despair;
loo County, but at present
it
is
his elder brother
Hannes
to
:
German
ii6 Berlin, a
whose zealous dition of
its
faith
Settlement in 'Waterloo County,
Otit,,
Can.
and Christian generosity, the primary con-
existence
is
There was a meeting
due.
at his
house
and brought forth his last plea. At first Sudcoldness as in Lancaster and Cumberland, the same sullen denly the Holy Ghost seemed to enter Hannes and in a long
when Betzner
entered,
thundering speech he declared
their plain Christian duty not
it
to leave their far-off brethren in distress.
The result of his fervent appeal was the speedy organization "German Company," a joint stock company, where no one person should hold more than one whole, nor less than oneeighth of a share. The amount of two hundred thousand dollars of the
was handed over to Betzner and one Daniel Erb, all in silver, and transported by them "in ein leicht Plasierwageli" to their now finally secured homes. One may easily imagine the anxiety of the wanderers with their precious and tempting burden through all
the pathless desolation of the
to be crossed in a
scow 12 by 14
usual Corduroy track.
At
last
and good tidings
sponsibility
home journey; Niagara had feet,
tract of sixty
on the
and the con-
to their homesteads,
clusion of the business could take place.
"The
Swamp
Beverley
they brought their load of re-
We
read
thousand acres, more or
less,
conveyed
on the 29th of June, 1805, by Richard Beasley, of Barton, and his wife, Henrietta, to Daniel and Jacob Erb, for $1,000, surveyed into lots of 448 acres, and distributed by lot among the shareholders, so as to avoid jealousy, and to allow each settler to know beforehand where he was to locate."
A Berlin
copy of
Town
this
deed
is still
kept at the Registry Office of the
Hall.
Eighteen hundred and six was an important year for the colonists.
Jacob Schneider from Path Valley, Pa., in Franklin
County, near Chambersburg, acquired land for a party of 418 This large contingent parted from their old homepersons. stead for a thirty-two days' journey. carts,
men
land, partly
Women
and children
in
partly on horseback, to reconnoitre the lay of the
goading the beasts of burden or driving the
fiocks.
Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Ont., Can.
117
seems to In spite of a few small casualties general cheerfulness of the like one seemed that company have prevailed among this Allethe across Their road led tribes of the Old Testament.
ghany Mountains, the Susquehanna, Tonawanda and Niagara At that time Rivers. The latter was spanned by rough bridges. out Hamilton on this side of the Beverly Swamp had budded had its mill with a few log cabins and a small inn Dundas still ;
and somewhat increased
store.
over their respective allot2" of the "German Comments, Benjamin Eby located on "Lot had a house pany's Tract." He gave out a job of two acres and Then he went back to his former place in Lancaster built.
When
this large party scattered
Marie BruCounty, only to return in June, 1807, with his bride, house with own his build bacher.' The very fact that he did not work out, so as to his own hands like his brethren, but gave the distinction bring his young wife to a ready made home, showed a Yarrick and between him and the others, even his own brothers, generally Samuel Eby, both sturdy farmers. The latter was child known under the name of "Indian Sam." Benjamin as a an was it that so had shown himself thoughtful and delicate, Benny "Aus 'em established fact among friends and neighbors— led to Bauer, der muss Schulmeister werre!" This companions his than the lad having a somewhat better education
kommt kae and
his ultimately
embracing the ministry.
He
became Bishop
ordination in 1809, he of the Mennonites, and soon after his Four years later a offered a site for a church on his own land.
"Benjamin Eby's Versammlungsin Waterloo haus" was ready for divine service the first church
little
log building,
known
as
:
little German In a house next to the church he kept a Beatty, "an Irishschool, not quite the first, however, for "John
County.
man," had taught stead at the
"Two
house near "Indian Sam's" homeEbys, Bridges," being engaged by the three
in a small
Joseph Schneider and others. There was a small but constant influx of
mans some
skilled mechanics.
A
settlers, all
weaver named
Ger-
Bersicker had
ii8 Berlin, a
German
Settlement in Waterloo Cojmty, Ont., Can.
shop where the present post office stands. On the site of the present Bank of Commerce Hved a turner, Christian Christner, his
"der niachte Spindehi
fiir
Spinnrader, Spulen und desgleichen."
Further down, where
now
the principal thoroughfare runs, there
Hved a fanning milhvright, also a wainwright, with a little drinking place attached to his shop, which shows the beginning of some traffic.
Peaceful occupation, right in the beginning of the
settle-
ment, received a rough shock by the outbreak of the war between
England and the United States
in
1812.
The Mennonites
ob-
tained respect for their religious tenets, in so far that, although
pressed into service, they were only used as teamsters to the
They even
English army.
received indemnification after the
war. It is quite
evident that Benjamin Eby's house, church and
school formed the nucleus of a hamlet or village which
though
steadily growing,
"Sand
it
only went under the
name
was
of the
Hills," or "Eby's Place." fifteen, a new party arrived from They had a rough greeting next year; 1816 was "Cold Summer." In June, July and August every-
Eighteen hundred and
Berks County. the terrible
thing was frozen
stifY
as in
December, there were no crops, and
only wise distribution of grain and provender could avoid actual
famine for
man and
beast.
Wolves, bears and foxes, starving
were driven close helped a
little
skins are
among
to
human
habitations,
in the frozen swamps, and maybe the fur trade
against the general need, for wild beasts, whose the most highly prized, were seen
and
killed in
unusual numbers.
The tained,
Indians, with
were glad
whom good
relations
were always main-
to avail themselves of the help of the
Faces" against the inclemencies of the weather. that kitchens
were
left
We
"Pale
are told
open at night, and some rough messes
placed on the hub of the hearth for the shivering tribesmen who,
with their Squaws and Pappooses, crept into the
warm
ashes,
and
Berlin^ a
German
Settlement in Waterloo County, Out., Can.
119
touched never a thing but what was meant for them, even showed
many httle ways. It who immigrated,
their gratitude in
Hailer, a wheelwright,
is
also said that
Jakob
not from Pennsylvania,
but from Baden, Germany, in 1833, allowed the Indians the use of his workshop between Christmas and
New Year
every year,
and that they conscientiously replaced every tool they had used and took nothing away. This man's daughter,^ Mrs. Breithaupt, is
the oldest living inhabitant born of native
a great number of
Forest
ways
fires
whom
were another of the terrors yet they seemed ;
have been controlled.
to
went up
German immigrants,
mingled with the Pennsylvanians.
to 90c., even to $1.05 per bushel; later the general
ket price
was 50
Land went according
to 60c.
al-
In those bad years wheat prices
to location
mar-
from
$2.50 to $4 per acre.
May
John Hoffman arrived with his brother Jakob, both from Pennsylvania. They were mere boys, and with one John Bowers they learned the trade of cabinetmakers, starting, after they had finished their apprenticeship, a little factory on a sandy track by the corner of a marsh, on a plot given to them by Bishop Eby next to them David Miller opened a little store. This was in so far an important event as it was the birth of the chief industry of the town. Miller's store was near the seat of the present townhall, at that time a large sandhill, the same that gave the village its unpromising name. Soon after it was cut down by some citizens who wished the ground for building pur24, 1824,
;
The timber was
poses. forest
was not
still
yet far away,
easily obtainable, for the primaeval
and one Schantz, who seems
to
have
been a particularly clearheaded and upright dealer, had organ-
lumber trade, as he owned several heavily wooded lots, cutting down just as much as was required, and giving his cusized the
tomers well-seasoned lumber at reasonable
One
rainy afternoon,
we
master, Bishop Benjamin's grandson),
record of settlers
which
Burghers had gathered
in
prices.
are told by Ezra
Eby
(a School-
in his introduction to the
several workmen and Hoffmann's workshop, discussing the
he compiled,
ISO Bc7lm, a Cervwn Settlement in Waferho County, Ont., Can.
growth of their town. Bishop Eby joined them, and to his inquiry what they were talking about, one called out "J^> wie soil denn unser neie Stadt heisse?" The Bishop looked around, and finding that many of those present came from Berlin* he :
"Ei so
The same evening the men home rejoicing: "unser Stadtche hat nu e Name! Mer heissen's Berlin!" And Berlin, Ontario, it was from this mosaid:
heisst's
doch Berlin!"
went
ment.
il^p:s;i|
Henceforth there
sound organization stray bear
now and
to be noticed the steady
is
Canadian town.
in the little
then, or the visit of friendly Indians, Berlin
lost its primaeval character.
A
Post Office was opened as
and then at Waterloo, not Berlin. the Government had slighted intentionally
as 1841,
But
town.
in
growth of a In spite of a
It really
late
looked as
this decidedly
if
German
185 1, in the fight for the position as county
town Berlin carried the victory over the neighborhood Gait. The first newspaper was the Museum, succeeded ill 184 1 by Dcr Deutsche Canadicr, published by Henry Eby, the Bishop's son, and Christian Enslin, also bookbinder and bookseller by trade. It was for quite a time the only link with the events of the world, except, of course,
Canadier for place are
its
now
part
private
was destined
correspondence.
to pass
away
in time.
The In
its
the Deutsche Zeitiing and the Journal, weekly
papers with a circulation of 1500 and 1759 copies respectively; also one or two English dailies. In the German tongue appears a
little
mission sheet Der Evageliumshote, monthly. :
Church given
way
Baptists
life is
to
very active
stately
;
the old
edifices;
there
"Versammlungshaus" has are
German Lutherans,
and Methodist Churches, besides those for the English
population.
The
present fine schools are the keystone of the arch which
we
see rising from such humble foundations as that of of the Irishman, John Beatty's, and Bishop Eby's little German School. About 1828, a Miss Clemens kept a summer school, a Mr. DeKay, a ^Evident by Berlin, LancasterJCy., Pa.
—
Berlin^ a
German
—
Settlement in "Waterloo County Ont., Can.
121
^
Another one,
was kept in the Union Church by one Winger, pumpmaker by trade, where the poor
winter school.
also English,
scholars sat shivering round the stove.
"But",
we
read, "the
was a kind and good one for the time." In advertisements of Dcr Deutsche Canadier several times "ein Lehrer" is asked to apply, yet the emoluments do not seem to have been very tempting. A Sunday School was founded about also a 1841 "im klein Schulhaus beim Versammlungshaus"
teacher
;
branch of the Bible Society.
Growth
of industry, the leveling influence
world while raising the prosperous township to
from the outside
—which now claims
have enough inhabitants to be able to apply for a City charter
to the rank of a thriving business centre,
have naturally worn
the quaint old world characteristics of pioneer times, of the
homemakers
in the wilderness.
en their best to they are
they ing.
The
primaeval forests have giv-
to enrich the seat of their usurpers;
feeding the sources of wealth of their former
still
still
make and
sites,
supply superior timber for housebuilding and furnish-
Names
of old Mennonite householders
as Eby, Schantz,
Hofmann,
make
and craftsmen such,
Enslin, Miller, reappear as heads of
large factories, where hosts of industrious, laborers
off
first
home owning,
skilled
a living of moderate plenty, yet the departure of the
olden times and with
who had known
it
was evidently
the old people
them, for
we
felt
by those
find the following quaint verses at-
tached to Ezra Eby's otherwise dry catalogue:
"Wo
sin jetzt die alte
"Von
"Wo
sin die gute alte
Die scheene gute
"Ma
Doddys
die gute alte Zeit?
sehn
sie
Mommies,
alte
nimme
"Die scheene gute
Leit?
bei
uns do,
alte Leit.
"Im Himmel sind sie "Und frehen sich in
jetzt so froh.
Ewigkeit. C. L.
Philadelphia.
NICOLA Y,
REVIEWS. Persdnliche Eindriicke von Brandl.
amcrikanischcn Universitdten. Deutsche Rundschau. April, 1907.
Alois
The Franklin Bi-Centennial Celebration occasioned the gathermany of the world's noted scientists and scholars. Among these dignitaries was Doctor Alois Brandl, Proing, at Philadelphia, of
During American universities, viz. Pennsylvania, Columbia, Harvard and Yale. Upon the impressions gained at these institutions, the article in question was written. The author is fully aware that the observations made do not obtain in The article all American universities, especially those of the West. is written with perfect fairness and due appreciaton of local confessor of English Literature at the University of Berlin.
his stay here he visited four great
:
ditions.
In the college, the foundation of our universities, the writer recognizes an outgrowth of the English educational system, while
an offspring of the adBeing a ceaseless vanced methods of the German ins'itutions. investigator himself, he does not fail to note that the Americans are eager in the discovery of new truth. While England seems to in
our graduate schools he rejoices
to find
be content to teach accepted truths, America, like Germany, striving for
new
Our ample
is
ever
course,
im-
discoveries.
provision
for physical education, of
presses every foreigner, and Dr. Brandl agrees with most
Germans
slightly overdo it. He fully values the good that springs and expresses the hope that "Studentenkolonien" may be established in German cities. He says: "Gratitude and blessing will
we
that
from
it
come
to the rector
who
succeeds in bringing about this undeniable
necessity."
German institutions,
(122)
from which our schools, other than state obtaining the necessary means, largely
universities obtain their financial appropriations
the government.
The
difficulty
experience in
Personliche Eindrucke von Amerikanischen Universit'dten.
from private benefactors, citizens are very liberal,
is
quite apparent.
123
Though our wealthy
their donations are of necessity localized
and often misapplied by the donor himself. Our faculties are underpaid and no provision is made for the support of aged educators. Among university men Dr. Brandl found a due appreciation of German life and institutions. The anti-German feeling among the masses, he believes, is caused by our press copying prejudiced artitcles from the British periodicals, and one of the greatest strongholds of friendly feeling for Grmany is to be found among the Americans who have studied at German universities. Professor Brandl has examined our institutions with an impartial mind and has observed with great accuracy and deep insight.
Wm.
G. Bek.
.
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF GERMAN AMERICANA FOR THE
YEAR
1906.
William Godfrey Bek.
To
worker
the
in the vast field of
German American
relations,
an easy survey of the activity in this domain should be welcome.
Of
the
many
possible phases of this work, the literary, historical
The
cultural are particularly emphasized.
and
impossibility of render-
ing such a compilation absolutely complete at this time, must be manifest.
It is
more important contriThe compiler will be most Annals, who may inform him
believed, however, that the
butions to this study are here noted. grateful to any of the readers of the
of any publications on subjects germane to this bibliography which are not here included.
The compiler
takes great pleasure in acknowledging the assist-
Amandus Johnson
ance of Mr.
graphy which pertains
to the
in securing that part of the biblio-
Skandinavians in America.
MONOGRAPHS. Bahr, Max.
Reisebericht ijber Amerika.
Landsberg Bck,
Wm. Its
a.
Pub. Fr. Schaeffer
&
Co.,
W.
The German Settlement
G.
Colony Hermann, Mo.
Society of Philadelphia and Americana Germanica Press, Phila-
delphia, 1907.
Bottger,
W.
Amerikanisches Hochschulwesen.
Leipzig.
W. En-
gelmann. Burgess, John
Ginn
&
W.
Germany, Great Britain and the United
States.
Co., Boston.
Dcutschcs Export-Handbuch
filr
Brasilicn.
1906.
Pub.
Herm.
Paetel, Berlin.
Amerikanische Eindriicke. J. G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger, Stuttgart und Berlin.
Fulda, Ludzvig.
(124)
—
Bibliography of German Americana for the Year jgo6.
125
Germanistische Gesellschaft dcr Staats-Unkersitat von Wisconsin. Deutsches Liederbuch fiir amcrikanische Studenten. D. C.
&
Heath
Co., Boston.
The
Gordon, Armistead Churchhill.
A
Gift of the
Morning Star
Story of Sherando.
Handbuch des
Deiitschtimis im Auslandc. Herausgegeben vom Allgemeinen Deutschen Schulverein ziir Erhaltung des Deutsch-
tums im Auslande.
Edition.
II.
Reimer.
Dietrich
Berlin,
1906.
Hofer, A.
gramm.
Eine Studienreise nach den Vereinigten Staaten. Frankfurt a. M.
Dentsch
Knorts, Karl.
Amerika.
in
Pro-
C. L. Hirschfeld, Leipzig.
Kristlig Kalender for 1906.
Augustana Book ConIowa konferensens barnhem. Julnordvastra Minnesota for trettio ar sedan. Minnen
Korshanerct. cern,
Rock
ottor
i
Island,
—
111.
—
fran borjan af var kyrkliga verksamhet
i
—
Red River-dalen och
N. Dakota.
Hermann
Americana.
Lamprecht, Karl.
Heyfelder, Freiburg im
Breisgau.
Lochcmcs, M.
&
Wiltzins
Meyer, A. B.
Gedichte
J.
Co.,
M.
Dcutschamerikaners.
eines
H.
Milwaukee.
Amcrikanische Bibliotheken und ihre Bestrebungen.
Friedlander, Berlin. Pallet,
Ludzmg.
Philipp, Editard.
Schule und Kunst
in
Amerika.
Teubner, Leipzig.
Die deutsche Auslandsschule und ihre Lehrer.
Pierson, Dresden. PUster, Albert.
Nach Amerika im
Stuttgart.
1906.
J.
Dienste
Friedrich
Schillers.
G. Cotta'sche Buchhandlung Nachfolger.
Augustana Book Concern, Svensk-amerikansk lifsbild. Om Esaias Tegners erotiska passion. E. A. C. W. Andeer. Zetterstrand. Svensk-Amerikas dag i Norrkoping. Joh. A. Skrackdagarna San Francisco. Ernst Skarstedt. Enander.
Prdrieblomman.
Rock
—
Island,
—
Om
Kalender for 1907.
111.
— —
1906.
—
Prarielif.
i
Jules Mauritszon.
svensk rattstavning.
svenskarnas bildnings-strafvanden.
ameriansk kulturhistoria.
—Victor ningar.
Witting.
A. Schon.
—
Axel
Ett
litet
—
Nebraska-
stycke
svensk-
— Tvenne veteraner. Silfversparre. — Biografiska
S.
M.
Hill.
teck-
1
Bibliography of
26
German Americana for
Gesammelte Werke.
Rattcnnaiin, H. A.
Year igo6.
the
Vol.
I
unci II.
Pub. by
himself at Cincinnati, O. Reisebiklcr aus Amerika.
Roder, A.
Puttkammer & Miihlbrecht,
Berlin.
Med
Sandzen, Birger.
Rock
cern,
Island,
—
Schnrc, Karl.
111.
Lebcnscrinnerungen. Industrial Efficiency.
Shadwell, Arthur.
Augustana Book Con-
Pensel och Penna.
Industrial Life in England,
Geo. Reimer.
A
Berlin.
Comparative Study of
Germany and America.
2 volumes.
Longmans. London. 1906. Symra. En aarbog for norske paa begge sider af havet. Hjalmer Hjorth Boyesen. M. A. MikkelDecorah, Iowa.) Nordiske studier Nybyggerskisser. H. R. Holand. sen.
—
—
—
—
Geo. T. Flom. ved amerikanske universiteter. D. G. Ristad. norsk-lutherske hoiskole i America.
Om
den
and Ellwang's authorized translation of Friedrich Paulsen's The German Universities and University Study. Chas. Scribner's Sons, New York.
Thilly
Der
Julius.
Wolf,
deutsch-amerikanische
Handelsvertrag,
etc.
Gustav Fischer, Jena.
ARTICLES FOUND IN PERIODICALS. Annals of Iowa.
January, 1906.
The Dunkers
in
Iowa.
John E.
Mohler.
The University M.
October, 1906.
Arena.
Change
in
National Education.
of Berlin and the Proposed Butler.
Bcilage der Allgemcinm Zcitung (Miinchen). January 27, 1906. Professor Peabody iiber die amerikanischen Universitaten.
January
31,
Stiftungen des Amerikaners Yerkes zu
1906.
wisscnschaftlichen Zwecken.
February
11, 1906.
Professor Peabody's Abschied von Ber-
lin.
February 24, 1906.
Jugendfiirsorge in Amerika.
Berthold
Beck.
March March
7,
1906.
16, 1906.
rechts in Colorado.
Zum
Professorenaustausch.
Die bisherigen Resultate des FrauenstimmErnst Schultze.
German Aynericana for the Year
Bibliography of
March
rgo6.
127
Eine Fakultat der schonen Kiinste an der
20, 1906.
Columbia Universitat in New York. March 28, 1906. Amerikanische Museumspolitik. April
7,
Ein deutsches Liederbuch
1906.
fiir
amerikanische
Studenten. April 24 and 25, 1906.
Shakespeare
in
George B.
Amerika.
Churchill.
Das Kunstschutzgesetz und
April 27, 1906.
die Ver. Staaten
von Amerika.
May May
8,
Ein kanadisches Kulturbild.
1906.
Zum
30, 1906.
deutsch-amerikanischen Professorenaus-
tausch.
May
31, 1906.
Die kalifornischen Universitaten.
June
30, 1906.
Studentenzahl an den amerikanischen Univer-
sitaten.
Karl Schurz
8, 1906.
July
July 23, 1906.
August Wilhelm's
in
Autobiograph. in die
Ver. Staaten.
Die Ausstellung der Geschenke Kaiser
1906.
23,
als
Die Einwanderung
dem Germanischen Museum
der Harvard Univer-
sitat.
Die Beitrage der Kongresse von
September 12, 1906. Louis. H. Oldenberg. September 15, 1906.
Eine akademische Feier
in
St.
Amerika.
G. E. Karsten.
September October
28, 1906.
16, 1906.
Kuba und
die Kubaner.
Amerikanische Hochschulen.
W.
Bottger.
October 22 and November 16, 1906. Eine Fahrt zum Geologenkongress in Mexico. A. Rothpletz. Buckncll Mirror. sities.
Vol. xxv, No.
3.
Education
at
German Univer-
G. C. L. Riemer.
Columbia University Quarterly. Nicholas Murray
September, 1906.
Karl Schurz.
Butler.
December, 1906.
Inaugural Address of the Kaiser Wilhelm
Hermann Schumacher. Professor. Contemporary Review. November, 1906. Education and Mis-education in Germany. J. E. Barker. Germanizing the World. C. E. Cosmopolitan. January, 1906. Russel.
1
Bibliography of German Aviericana for the Year igo6.
28
Current Literature. to
Jiil.v,
1906.
Carl Schurz
—Germany's Best Gift
America.
Det Norske Selskabs Aarhog.
Koshkonong.
January, 1906.
Hy
Holland.
Deutsche Erde.
No. win Oppel. Nos. 3 and 4. Einwanderer in
Das Deutschtiim
1906.
2.
1906. die
in
Kanada.
Al-
Die Ermittelung des Volkstums der
Vereinigten
Kin Beitrag
Staaten.
Kenntniss des Anteils der Deutschen.
zur
Richard Bockh.
Herausgegeben von der Deutsch-Amerikanischen Historischen Gesellschaft von Illinois. Auf den Pfaden deutsch-amerikanischer GeJanuary, 1906. schichtsforscher. Wilhelm Miiller. Deutsch-Amerikanische Rosier von Oels. G. A. Fritsch. Jubilaen. Offener Brief an den Senator Thompson von Kentucky. Gustav Adolph Ros-
Deutsch-Amerikanische Geschichtshlatter.
—
—
—
ier.
January and April, 1906.
Spitznamen
January, April, July, October, 1906.
Amerika.
A. R.
Geschichte der Deut-
Heinrich Bornmann.
schen Ouincy's. April, 1906.
in
Die Mission der Deutschen
als
Wandervolk
in
— Die Deutsch-Ameri— Geschichte kanische Historische Gesellschaft von des Townships 1906. Carl Schurz. H. H. Pick. — Carl Schurz. Sein Leben und Wirken. Wilhelm Vocke. — Erste deutsche Ansied— Deutsches Zeitungswesen von Carroll County, Quincy. Heinrich Bornmann. — Siebzigjahriges Jubilaum des Cincinnati Volksblatt. — Todtenschau. Heinrich Bornmann. — Carl Schurz Memorial Services. — Carl Schurz, Cosmopolitan Benjamin Terry. — Carl Schurz, The Germanand American. Harry Rubens. — The Men of 1848 and the Effect of Their Immigration. Edmund James. — Carl Schurz, the American Statesman. F. C. Winkler. — Carl Schurz as a Hermann Oucken.
der Weltgeschichte.
Illinois.
Saline.
July,
ler
in
111.
Patriot.
J.
Moral Force.
Charles
October, 1906.
Heinrich Gramann. deut.sche
Element
F. C. Kothe.
J. Little.
Geschichtliches aus Clinton County, Illinois.
in
—
Die Deutschen
Kane County
in
(111.).
Wisconsin. -^ Das
—
Elginer Skizzen.
— Etwas vom Deutschtum im Staate Michigan.
(5erman Qmcrican Qnnals CONTINUATION OF THE QUARTERLY
AMERICA NA GE RMANICA ^^
A BI-MONTHLY DEVOTED TO THE COMPARATIVE STUDY OF THE
Historical, Literary, Linguistic, Educational
and Commercial Relations
OF
Germany and America ORGAN OF
Thf German American Historical Society The National Gervian American Alliance
The Union of Old Germati Students
in
EDITOR,
MARION DEXTER LEARNED, University of Pennsylvania.
CONTRIBUTING EDITORS H. C. G. Brandt,
:
America
(Scrman Qmcrican Clnnals CONTINUATION OP THB QUARTERLY
AMERICANA GERMANICA New
May and
Series,
Vol. V.
No.
Old
June
Series,
No.
IX.
Vol.
1907.
3.
3.
FRANCIS DANIEL PASTORIUS. The Founder
of
Germantown.
By Marion Dexter Learned. (Copyrighted.
All rights reserved.)
Chapter
I.
Francis Daniel Pastorius, the founder of Germantown, the first
permanent German colony
in
North America, was born
Sommerhausen, Franconia, September 20, War.
after the close of the Thirty Years'
of a distinguished
German
family,
years
three
1651,
He was
whose history
in
the scion
reflects
the
vicissitudes of the fierce religious strife of the times of Gustavus
Adolphus, Tilly and Wallenstein. still
The wounds
unhealed and the bitterness of the strife
war
of the
w^ere
lingered in
still
the adherents of the Catholic and Protestant cause, severing in
the
same family the strongest
The family
ties
of kinship and blood.
of Pastorius seems to have been one of the
many
whose names were Latinized under the influence of humanism.
The Latin form Pastorius
w'ould point to an original
German
Schafer or Hirt or some combination of one of these names.
It
seems not unlikely that the German name had a longer form.
A
persistent
tradition
in
Franconia
connects
the
family
of
Hiigelschdifer with that of Pastorius, deriving the former from the latter.
It
seems far more
likely,
however, that Pastorius
a Latinized form of an original Hiigclsclmffcr.
monize with the
fact that the
is
This would har-
name HiigclscMffer appears
in the
records of an early period in other places and this family has
(131)
Francis Daniel Pastoritcs
132
same coat-of-arms as Pastorius.
the
But
subject belongs
this
to the genealogist rather than the historian or biographer.^
Two
branches of the Pastorius family were prominent in
Germany
in
other
Westphalia,
in
the seventeenth
work has
the latter branch that this
The
century,
Thurinigia and
enteenth century by Joachim Pastorius,
Dec. 26,
1
20,
in the doctrines
It
is
with
is
represented in the sev-
who was born
at
Glogau
1611,^ and died at Frauenberg in Prussia
He was
68 1.
Franconia.
chiefly to deal.
Silesian branch of the family
in Silesia Sept.
one in Silesia and the
the son of a parson and
He was
of Socinus.
was reared
a "Doctor medicinae" and
distinguished for his writings on Polish history.
Joachim Pastorius was made "Stadtphysicus" of Elbing
and
165 1
in
Professor of History at the
In 1652 he became Rector of the
place.
gone over
Gymnasium
Lutheran Church, he took up
to the
by the Polish Diet In 1665 he was
m
He was
1656, and was named "Indigenat" 1662 and took the title "ab Hirtenberg."
made
in
"Secretarius Regius," but resigned his
post and went over to the
married he received high
1
fitting to
It is
leiter to C. 2.
Roman
Catholic Church.
offices in the
in this
connection a letter of the Rev. S. Hanss-
(wahrscheinlich durch
Vermuthung
des
HE
Pf.
Hof-
verbreitete A.nsicht, dass die hier ansassige, geachtete Familie Hiigel-
schafifer
— welche friiher im
Besitze des oben erwahnten Hauses [welches von
M. A. Pastorius im Jahre 1655 erbaut wurde] gewesen ein
Although
Catholic Church, having
Sharpless Pastoiiur, in Florence, dated Sommerhausen, February
"Die bier
1S88:
mann)
quote
that
his duties as
Professor of History in Dantzig, January 28, 1655.
made Historicus Regius
in
Having
Gymnasium.
ahnliches
seien, die
Familicnzeichen
fiihrt
mit Verdeutschung des
—directe
Namens
ist,
und wohl seitdem
Nachkommen von
Pastorius
hier geblieben seien, entbehrt dcr
Begriindung. und jeder Wahrscheinlichkeit, da erwiesenermassen der Name Hiigelschaffer in friiher Zeit schon in anderen Dorfern vorkommt, von welchen vielmehr die hiesige Familie dieses Namens ausgegangen ist."
urkundlichen
2
Or
in
Universelle).
1610,
according to other authorities
(cf.
Michaud, Biographic
:
:
Francis Daniel Pastorius
133
been Vicar General of Pomerellen and Canon of Frauenberg'.
His extensive History of Poland was
Georg Adam works were published from
his son,
1.
finished
and published by
The
Pastorius, after his death. his
following
pen
Polonicge Historiae seu Joachimi Pastorii Florus Polonicus Apud Franciscum Hegerum Epitome Nova Lvgd. Batavor. ]
Ao
|
|
|
1641.
The second
addition appeared in 1642 with the following
title
2.
Fieri Polonici
|
seu
|
Epitome Nova AuPolonicse Historae a mendis repurEditio secunda
I
gata.
|
|
loachimo Pastorio. Lvgd. Batavor.
thore
|
|
Apud
|
Franc. Hegervm,
]
Ann.
I
MDCXLII. The
120.
title-page of the second edition has a
young (as old an emblem w^hich
senting the pelican feeding her
had
it)
from her own blood,
the tombstone of Melchior
Kirchhof
Adam
even a copy of a
3.
tradition falsely is
found also on
Pastorius in the St. Johannes
at Niirnberg.
Amsterdam, 1664, and with a continuation was published
Another enlarged edition appeared ("Gedani
woodcut repre-
et
fifth edition
at
Francofurti") in 1679.
....
Heroes Sacri, Musa Peregrinans. Joachimi Pastorii Daniel Vetter: 120. Flos Poloniffi, et Epigrammata Varia. Lesnas Polon. [1644.] Second, corrected and enlarged edition with the addition
of his "Character Virtutum" Danzig, 1653, 12 mo. 4.
Ex Gallico auctoris anonymi [Eustache Aulicus inculpatus. Apud L. Elzevirium: de Refuge] traductus a J. Pastorio. Amsterdami, 1644.
5.
Peplum Sarmaticum.
6.
Aquilse
120.
[Another edition
in 1649.]
Dantisci, 1645.
Sarmaticae super Augustis Nuptiis Johanni Casimiri Applausus. 1649.
Francis Daniel Pastorius
134 7.
Bellum Scythico-Cosacicum seu de conjuratione Tartarum Cosacorum et Plebis Russicoe contra regnum Poloniae ab invictissimo Poloniai
Rege
et SuecicE
J.
plenioris historiae operi praemissa.
1652-1659.
tisci.
De
9.
Palaestra Nobilium.
juventutis institutionis ratione.
Vita
J. Crellii
descripta. 11.
Stella
Dan-
Dantzig, 1653.
1654.
fol.
fax virtutis ex natura stellarum accensa.
[1656.]
80.
12.
Sylvarum pars prima 1656, pars secunda 1657.
13.
J.
Quarum prima de praecipuis de potissimis eiusdem argumentis agit.
Pastorii Orationes duae.
historiae autoribiis, altera
Gedani [1656]. 14.
:
a J[oachimo] P[astorio] M[edicin3e] D[octore]
1656
Aurea, seu
Dantisci.
Sumptibus G. Forsteri
40.
8.
10.
Casimiro profligata, narratio
.
.
.
40,
Panegyrica Gratulatio Londini festivitate Carolo II solennissima inaugurando scripta a J. Pastorio. Gedani, 1661. .
.
.
.
.
.
40. 15.
Ministri status, seu considerationes super vita Nicolai Neovilli. [Translation of the Remm ques of P. Matthieu.] Jena, 1644.
16.
Historia Polonica ab obitu Uladislai IV, usque ad annum 1651. Dantisci, 1680-1685. [Vol. II published by his son, Georg Adam Pastorius, closing with a dissertation on "De Originibus Sarmaticis."]
17.
Joachimi de Hirtenberg Pastorii Character Virtutum variis, aliorum etiam qua veterum, qua recentium auctorum, coloribus adumbratus [ist edition, Dantzig, 1650, and 4th edition, with the appendix "Opusculum, Lucem Virtutem et natura stellarum explicans, &c." [Gratulatio paregorica ... ad Regem Joannem Casimirum, etc., pp. 36-80. D. F. Rhetius, Dantisci :
[1680]. 18.
J.
80.
ab Hirtenberg Pastorii Historiae Polonae pars prior, de VladIV extremis, secutoque inde interregno, et Joannis Casimiri
islai
electione ac coronatione.
simul gentis descriptio, So.
etc.
Interserta
Cosacorum
Typis T. Reinigeri
:
et
Tartaricae
Gedani, 1680.
Francis Daniel Pastorius 19.
135
ab Hirtenberg Historic Polonse plenioris partes cjusdemque disscrtatio pbilologica de originibus SarmatiSumptibus S. Beckensteinii: Dantisci, 1685. 80.
Pastorii
J.
duse: cis.
20.
Aurora pacis Diarium pacificationis Olivensis, ex Bibliotheca Zalusciana nunc primum prolatum, Oliva pacis.
21.
Acta pacis Olivensis inedita. lished by J. Gottlob Boehm.]
:
Breslau, 1763 and 1766.
Other minor works are mentioned
in Chr.
[Pub-
Sandius' Bibliogra-
phia Anti-Trinitariorum.
Although neither Melchior Adam Pastorius nor his son Francis Daniel seems to have been aware of any relationship between Joachim and themselves, there are striking coincidences in the history of the families which point to the kinship of the Silesian
family.
and Westphalian-Thuringian branches of the Pastorius The use of the pelican emblem has already been men-
"ab Hirtenberg" of Joachim Pastorius is closely allied to the baronial title "von Hirtenfels" which the German Emperor conferred upon Johann Augustin Pastorius,
The
tioned.
title
brother of Melchoir
Both
titles
indicate a
Adam
Pastorius of the Thuringian
compound form
Now the coat-of-arms, Melchior Adam Pastorius' house
German. of
down
in
the Hiigelschaffer
of the
name
as found
line.
in the original
on the
datestone
in Sommerhausen and handed family of the same place has a
sheep pasturing on one of three
hills,
which would suggest the
"berg" in "ab Hirtenberg" and the "fels"
in
"von Hirtenfels,"
and thus lend a new presumption in favor of the theory of the connection of "Pastorius" and "Hiigelschaffer." In his brief account of the family Francis Daniel Pastorius
begins with his great grandfather Christian Pastorius, a citizen of
Warburg
m
Westphalia.
This
baptismal
name
Christian,
however, does not agree with the account of Melchior Adam Pastorius. who gives the name of his grandfather as Fridericus not Christianus.
It is possible,
name may have been
but not very probable, that his
Christianus Fridericus or Fridericus Chris-
:
:
Francis Daniel Pastorius
136 tianus.
Melchior
Adam
gives the following account of the origin
of his family
"Origo Familins Pastorianse ex Ciutate Warburgensi Wcstphaprouenit, Vbi Fridericus Pastorius Ciuis et Senator erecto animo uixit, et filiu unicum r^Iartinum progenuit, ac post se reliquit." liai
Having thus
traced the Westphalian origin of the family
and added an anagram, he continues: "Obijt Warburgi in Westphalia, ibidemque apud parentes ct Anno Christi. 1640. postquam filium Martinum Pastorium in Literis et liberalibus artibus bene educasset, et in Vniversitate Moguntinensi in lure lustinianaeo imbui fecisset." praedecessores sepultus
Martinus Pastorius, the son of Fridericus, was born and, after finishing his eduation
Code
the Justinian city of
at
m
liberal arts
made Tribunal Assessor (or Assessor
dren
Flinsberger (or
— Alargaretha,
chior
Adam,
When 3
He
Eva Rodiger,^ who bore hmi one son
wife, Brigatta
There
his son,
is
1576,
Mainz, he took up his residence in the
Erfurt and was
of the Electoral Council) in that city.
wife
m
and the study of
married as his Caspar.
His second
him
Flinsberg), bore
first
six chil-
(Johann) Augustin, Hemrich, Rebecca, Mel-
Balthasar.
the Swedes, under Gusta\us Adolphus, entered the
a discrepancy between Melchior
Francis Daniel, at this point.
Adam's account and
Melchior
Adam
that of
mentions only his
own mother
Martin's second wife, while Francis Daniel states clearly that Martin married Eva Rodiger, as his first wife
them [my children], that he [Martin] was twice marEve Rodigers, brought him a son called Caspar, who became a Popish priest and so a voluntary Eunuch, and of his second "I shall only tell
ried,
that his
first
wife,
wife Bridget
(Brigida), a daughter of Christian Flinsberger, inhabitant of Imperial city of Mulhausen, in Thuringen, he had six children, viz., Augustin, Margaret, Henry, Rebecca, Melchior Adam and Balthasar".
the
Melchior Adams' account in Itincrarium (p. in), runs thus: Martinus Pastorius Assessor Tribunalis siue ludicij Archiepiscopalis Moguntinensis in Ciuitate Erffurtensi. Natus Anno 1576. Duxit uxorem Brigittam Flinsbergerin ex qua progenuit sequentes Liberos Casparum, Margaretham, Angustinum, Henricu, Rebecca, Melchiorem Adamum, Et Balthasarum." :
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